Kane Country Club occupies rolling terrain in the Allegheny Plateau region of northwestern Pennsylvania, where the town of Kane sits at approximately 2,000 feet elevation amid dense hardwood and conifer forests. Ferdinand Garbin designed the course in the early twentieth century, part of a generation of regional architects who routed layouts through the natural contours of small-town America. The club reflects the modest scale and practical character typical of rural Pennsylvania golf from that era, with holes shaped by the existing topography rather than extensive earthmoving.
The routing works through moderate elevation changes and wooded corridors, with fairways framed by mature trees and greens that follow the natural slopes of the land. Garbin's design emphasizes playability for a membership drawn from the local community, balancing challenge with accessibility across varied skill levels. The course requires accurate placement rather than overwhelming length, and the higher elevation can affect ball flight and distance judgment, particularly during the cooler months of the mountain climate.
Kane Country Club serves as the recreational and social center for a small town with deep roots in the lumber and railroad industries that shaped the region in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The club maintains the straightforward, unpretentious character common to courses in rural Pennsylvania, where golf complements a broader tradition of community gathering and outdoor recreation in the Allegheny highlands.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Kane was designed by Ferdinand Garbin.
Yes. Kane at Kane Country Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Kane is 70.
Kane plays 6,005 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Kane is 125.
Kane is a 18-hole course.