HUNTERCOMBE GOLF CLUB
🏴 Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, England
Designed by Willie Park Jr.
Huntercombe Golf Club lies in the Chiltern Hills near Henley-on-Thames, occupying elevated heathland terrain that provides a distinctive setting in southern England. Willie Park Jr. designed the course in 1901, during a period when he was establishing himself as one of Britain's leading golf architects. The layout represents an early example of inland heathland golf, predating many of the more celebrated Surrey courses that would follow in the Edwardian era.
The routing takes advantage of natural elevation changes across the property, with several holes playing along ridges that offer views across the Oxfordshire countryside. Park's design incorporates the heather, gorse, and mature trees characteristic of heathland golf, though the course sits on chalk downland rather than the sand-based soils found farther south. The terrain creates a mix of uphill, downhill, and plateau holes that require thoughtful club selection and strategic positioning.
Huntercombe has maintained much of its original character through the decades, with relatively few substantial alterations to Park's routing. The club operates as a private members' course and has cultivated a reputation for traditional golf in a quieter corner of the Thames Valley, away from the busier championship venues. The course measures modest by modern standards but presents a test rooted in accuracy and course management rather than length.
The club has hosted regional amateur competitions and remains known primarily to those familiar with historic inland courses in the Home Counties.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Huntercombe was designed by Willie Park Jr..
Yes. Huntercombe at Huntercombe Golf Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Huntercombe is 70.
Huntercombe plays 6,300 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Huntercombe is 129.
Huntercombe is a 18-hole course.