Surrey
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St George's Hill Golf Club sits within a private 964-acre estate in Weybridge, Surrey, roughly 23 miles southwest of central London. When builder George Tarrant purchased the land in 1911, he conceived one of the world's earliest golf and residential developments — an idea that was, by any measure, well ahead of its time. The sandy property was covered in purple heather and stately pines, the same ingredients that would come to define quality inland golf in this part of England, and the terrain offered dramatic natural contours that most Surrey courses can only hint at.
Harry Colt designed the course in 1912 and it opened for play in 1913, celebrated as a prime example of his work during golf's Golden Age. He ultimately laid out 27 holes across the estate, organised today into three nines — Red, Blue and Green — with later refinements to the Green nine by Donald Steel. The championship combination of Red and Blue plays through heather and pine woodland at around 6,300–6,500 yards, with par sitting at 70 or 71 depending on the tees used. Those numbers might tempt underestimation. They shouldn't.
The castle-like clubhouse dominates the highest point of the course and commands a panorama looking down over no fewer than six holes — a view that sets the tone for a round shaped by constant elevation change. Colt worked with the hill rather than against it, producing a layout that swings from open heathland to tight, pine-framed corridors with barely a dull moment between. The course is straightforward one moment and incredibly challenging the next, and it is the par 3s that tend to linger longest in the memory. The standout is the 8th hole, where a stunning vista from the tee looks out toward a distant, domed green on the far side of a shallow ravine. The 4th — a short, downhill, driveable-but-dangerous par 4 — is another hole frequently cited among Colt's finest individual creations.
The wider estate has long attracted prominent residents, among them John Lennon, Ringo Starr, Nick Faldo and Jenson Button. The golf club itself has remained a private members' club throughout its existence, though visitors are welcomed on selected weekdays. Whether or not St George's Hill is the finest heathland course in Britain is a debate that continues among those who have played it seriously — but few who have walked the Red and Blue nines would argue it doesn't belong in that conversation.