Rolling Rock Club was originally of land owned by Judge
Thomas Mellon, who left it to his son
Richard Beatty Mellon, brother of
Andrew Mellon and onetime president of
Mellon Bank. Richard Beatty Mellon turned Rolling Rock into a rural retreat for his friends and family to hunt, fish, and ride. From this, it steadily developed into an establishment that, in addition to the usual country club necessities — swimming pool and golf course — also boasted stocked
trout streams, duck ponds, game birds, and shooting ranges. The club also kept a pack of English fox hounds, raised pheasants, and ran the
Gold Cup Steeplechase (from 1933 until 1983). R.B. Mellon left the estate to his son,
Richard King Mellon, when he died in 1933. In the middle of the twentieth century, Rolling Rock Club hunted over , mostly owned by 240 farmers whose acres surround the Mellon 18,000 acres. ==Golf course==