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Everywhere you travel in South Carolina you’ll find great golf courses designed by all of the world’s top architects. And every year you’ll find South Carolina courses recognized by leading golf magazines as among the finest in the nation – some perennial favorites and some new courses making their national reputations.
Best Golf Resorts
Top South Carolina Courses for Women
Best Places to Play
in South Carolina
America's Greatest Golf Courses
Best Public Courses in South Carolina
Top Courses in Myrtle Beach
Best New Upscale Public Course
Top South Carolina Courses in the U.S.
Top Resort Courses
Top Residential Courses
Best New Courses
GolfWeek Magazine’s
listing of their “
Top Courses in the United States
” features 10 great courses in South Carolina.
GolfWeek’s
list of its “
Top 100 Resort Courses
” features six from the Palmetto State, and when they listed their “
Top 100 Residential Courses
” they name 13 from the state!
Golf Digest’s
“
America’s 100 Greatest Golf Courses of 2005
” features five from South Carolina. That’s one more than either Florida or North Carolina.
And no less than nine of
Golf Digest’s
“
100 Greatest Public Golf Courses in America
” are waiting for you in South Carolina.
The first two on every list are world famous.
The
Ocean Course at Kiawah
was the site of the 1991 Ryder Cup, certainly one of the greatest golf tournaments in history. The Ocean Course sits astride two and three-quarter miles of pristine Atlantic Ocean beach. Says architect Pete Dye, “There’s no other golf course in the Northern Hemisphere that has as many seaside holes.”
Just as famous is the site of the
PGA Verizon Heritage Classic
since 1969,
Harbour Town Golf Links
on Hilton Head Island. While other classic courses are stretching their tee boxes even farther back to accommodate the length that the modern golf ball flies, the narrow fairways and tiny greens at Harbour Town – designed by Pete Dye and Jack Nicklaus – stand the tests of time and technology.
The
Love Course
(David Love, III, that is) at Barefoot Golf Resort
in North Myrtle Beach takes you back in time as you play around the recreated ruins of an old plantation house. The
Tom Fazio course
at Barefoot
is reminiscent of European courses that do not return to the clubhouse after nine holes, and has water visible on 15 holes.
The legendary
Dune Golf and Beach Club
, designed in 1948 by Robert Trent Jones, set the standard of golf excellence in the Myrtle Beach area, now the #1 golf destination in the world.
Tidewater Golf Club
was built in North Myrtle Beach in 1990, and is completely surrounded by the Intracoastal Waterway, saltwater marshes and the Atlantic Ocean.
Three new neighbors are on the list.
Caledonia
and sister course,
True Blue
a
re next door to
Heritage Plantation
. Built on Colonial rice plantations, these courses share the extraordinary natural beauty of Pawleys Island, where fragrant magnolias and 300-year-old live oaks frame freshwater lakes and tranquil salt marshes beside the Atlantic Ocean.
All nine of these great courses are along the coast, but Biff Lathrop of the South Carolina Golf Association says there’s more to see here. “Certainly play these great courses, and then stay a little longer. Our geography makes for so much variety. You’ll be amazed at the number of wonderful golf courses and friendly people you’ll find in South Carolina.’
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