Win tee times at some of the world's premier courses.

Port Elizabeth

Gqeberha, Eastern Cape
Gqeberha, Eastern Cape
Rankings

Founded in 1890, Port Elizabeth Golf Club quickly established itself as one of the leading lights in South African golf. Following the inception of the South African Tournament at Kimberley in 1892, Port Elizabeth then hosted the next three editions of the event before the club relocated to its present location in 1902.

The following year, the SA Tournament returned to Port Elizabeth for the fifth time and it included not only the Amateur Championship but the Open Championship, with four professionals and six amateurs competing in the event. Johannesburg-based pro Laurie Waters won the inaugural Open, posting a 36-hole aggregate score that beat his nearest rival by three strokes.

By 1934, Port Elizabeth had hosted eight Amateurs, five Opens, three Women’s Amateurs and three PGA Championships. In later years, the Amateur returned in 1974 and 1990, with the Women’s Amateur also taking place in 1979, 1998 and 2010. Twenty-four national titles decided during a 130-year history is good going for a rather unassuming club that lies in the shadow of nearby Humewood.

Unlike its illustrious neighbour on the coast, “The Hill” as it’s known locally, is a parkland layout with a variety of trees dotted around the property. Bob Grimsdell upgraded the course in 1952 then Danie Obermeyer and Philip Basson from Golfscape carried out a major renovation at the start of the new millennium, rebuilding greens and bunkers as well as replacing two holes.

Feature holes include right doglegging par fives at the 8th and 13th (with greenside water hazards affecting the approach shot to both holes); the heavily-bunkered short par four 16th; and the left doglegged 18th (rated stoke index 18) which offers an ideal opportunity to walk away from the home green having secured a birdie (or better) on the final hole.

Founded in 1890, Port Elizabeth Golf Club quickly established itself as one of the leading lights in South African golf. Following the inception of the South African Tournament at Kimberley in 1892, Port Elizabeth then hosted the next three editions of the event before the club relocated to its present location in 1902.

The following year, the SA Tournament returned to Port Elizabeth for the fifth time and it included not only the Amateur Championship but the Open Championship, with four professionals and six amateurs competing in the event. Johannesburg-based pro Laurie Waters won the inaugural Open, posting a 36-hole aggregate score that beat his nearest rival by three strokes.

1 / 1

Course Reviews

Leave a Review

* Required
  • 5 images maximum
  • Images must be a jpg file type and no more than 5mb
Sort By:

This course has not been reviewed.

If you have played this course, consider .

Thanks for the review

Your review has been successfully submitted and will be reviewed for approval.

Course Reviewed

You’ve already submitted a review for this course.

Please Sign In

Please sign in before submitting a review.

Sign In

Course Architect

View All
Bob Grimsdell

Bob Grimsdell was a skilful professional golfer and the pioneer of golf course architecture in South Africa whose legacy has been largely overlooked outside of his adopted homeland.

Explore More Courses

Wild Coast

Thank you

You've been subscribed.

Already Subscribed

You are already subscribed to our newsletter. Thank you for subscribing.

We've made some changes

Top 100 Golf Courses has a new look and feel. If you have comments or questions about the changes, please let us know.

Submit Feedback