Bloomfield Hills
country club was established in 1909. The privately owned club was organized by influential figures of
Detroit's industrial community. Its founders included Colonel Edwin S. George, William T. Barbour, George G. Booth, John C. Donnelly, John T. Shaw, and Charles Stinchfield. The property, then called the Knight farm, was acquired from Lester E. Wise for $12,500 in June 1909. It was established on one of the highest elevations in the
Bloomfield Hills section of
Oakland County in Michigan. The Bloomfield Hills Country Club commissioned
Tom Bendelow to create a
golf course. The original layout, a
links course, opened in October 1910. It marked the first golf and country club to operate north of Detroit. The design of the Bloomfield Hills course was completed by Colt in 1912. It was Colt's only solo golf course design in the United States. The formal opening of the members-only Bloomfield Hills Country Golf Club was held on May 17, 1913. The original clubhouse was a small white frame building. The Slater Construction Company of Pontiac received the general contract in December 1914. The 141-acre course opened on July 1, 1915, with the expanded clubhouse following on July 17. The new structure was four times larger than the original, measuring 217 feet by 86 feet. Improvements to the course were carried out by
Robert Trent Jones, Sr. in 1968 and 1978, followed by work from
Arthur Hills in 1981. In 2017, the club retained Mike DeVries and Frank Pont to create a long-term development plan for the course, with a restoration project completed by them in 2020. ==References==