WAHCONAH COUNTRY CLUB
🇺🇸 Dalton, MA, USA
Designed by Wayne Stiles
Wahconah Country Club sits in Dalton, Massachusetts, a small town in the Berkshires region of western Massachusetts. The course was designed by Wayne Stiles, a prominent New England architect of the early-to-mid twentieth century who created numerous layouts throughout the region during the 1920s and 1930s. Stiles typically worked with natural terrain and routed courses that followed the existing landforms, a characteristic evident in many of his Massachusetts designs.
The Berkshires landscape provides rolling terrain and mature tree cover, and courses in this area generally feature elevation changes and wooded corridors that define playing corridors. Stiles courses from this era tend to incorporate strategic bunkering and greens with subtle contours, asking golfers to think about angles and approach shots rather than relying purely on length. The setting in Dalton places the course within a region known for its paper manufacturing history and proximity to larger Berkshire towns like Pittsfield and Lenox.
Wahconah serves as a traditional country club for the local community, offering a classic New England golf experience shaped by the architectural principles of the Golden Age. The course reflects the period's emphasis on playability across different skill levels while maintaining strategic interest. For golfers exploring the Berkshires, it represents the kind of regional design work that defined American golf in smaller towns during the sport's expansion in the early twentieth century.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Wahconah was designed by Wayne Stiles.
Yes. Wahconah at Wahconah Country Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Wahconah is 71.
Wahconah plays 6,553 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Wahconah is 131.
Wahconah is a 18-hole course.