Establishment The club, which now has a total of 45 holes, was founded in 1878, initially with five holes. It lies adjacent to the
Firth of Clyde.
George Strath was appointed in 1881 as the club's first golf professional, and together with 1882 Open champion
Willie Fernie, designed the original course, expanding it to 18 holes by 1888. The two were assisted by
Charlie Hunter, greenskeeper of the neighbouring
Prestwick Golf Club, in Troon's formative years. When Strath left the club's employ in 1887, Fernie became head professional, and served in that role until his death in 1924. He laid out the club's Relief course, on the site of what would become Troon's New course, designed by Alister MacKenzie; Shortly after opening the New course was renamed in honour of the 6th Duke of Portland, an essential early Troon Golf Club patron and facilitator, who was one of the region's largest landowners.
Royal designation Troon was granted its "Royal" designation in 1978, during its
centenary. Its clubhouse, designed by
Henry Edward Clifford and built in 1886, is richly decorated with historical golf artifacts. James Montgomerie, father of
Colin Montgomerie, served as Secretary in the 1980s. Its
Old Course is one of the host courses for
The Open Championship, one of the
major championships on the
PGA Tour and
European Tour. The club has hosted 11 Open Championships, ten for men (most recently in
2024), and the
2020 Open for women (no men's equivalent that year).
Recent history On 1 July 2016, Royal Troon members voted overwhelmingly to admit women into the club as members, avoiding a potential controversy that could have overshadowed the 2016 Open Championship and led to the club being removed from the Open rota. ==Noteworthy characteristics==