City: Los Angeles, California
Year opened: 1923 (Harding), 1927 (Wilson)
Architects: Tom Bendelow (1914), George C. Thomas, Jr. (1923, 1927)
Total holes: 18 (Harding and Wilson)
Par: 72 (Harding and Wilson)
Length: 6,714 yards (Harding), 7002 yards (Wilson)
Slope rating: 122 (Harding), 126 (Wilson)
Course rating: 71.5 (Harding), 73.2 (Wilson)
Cost: $6-$35 (Harding), $6-$38 (Wilson)
Website: golf.lacity.org/course_harding, golf.lacity.org/course_wilson
Bottom line: Golf has been played in Los Angeles for over 100 years. The first municipal course West of the Rockies opened at Griffith Park in 1914. Babe Ruth was a regular at Griffith Park in those early days and was playing a round on Jan. 5, 1920, when news arrived that he had been traded from the Boston Red Sox to the New York Yankees.
Yankees owner Jacob Ruppert had sent Yankees manager Miller Huggins to Los Angeles to find the Babe and get his signature on the contract to close the deal. The Babe signed the contract in the Griffith Park golf clubhouse. Today, the “Birth of the Curse” plaque commemorating that historic moment is still there.
That original Griffith Park golf course designed by Tom Bendelow was replaced with two courses designed by George C. Thomas in 1923 and 1927. Those two courses, Harding and Wilson, are still going strong in the heart of Griffith Park. Just minutes from downtown Los Angeles, they are two of the best public tracks in the world. These municipal courses remain civic treasures, and people love playing rounds here.
Wilson is the longer course at over 7,000 yards and has a beautiful layout that has hosted many Los Angeles City championship events. With all its trees and greenery, you’re playing in a perfectly manicured forest. Harding is also a nice walk in the park, but it’s no cakewalk with narrow fairways, tough approaches and guarded greens.
Both courses have some inviting perks, including a shared clubhouse (built in 1937 and recently restored), restaurant, golf shop, lounge, lighted driving range and practice facilities. They also are close to the Los Angeles Zoo and Griffith Park Observatory, making them ideal for families.
One more fun fact: The building and grounds are said to be haunted (part of a 150-year-old Griffith Park curse) with spirits from bygone days. Many people have experienced ghost stories. Two spirits reportedly are named Babe, perhaps for Babe Ruth and Babe Didrikson, who also made history at Griffith Park in 1938 as the first woman to compete in a men’s golf event.
Book a golf lesson in Los Angeles and play Wilson or Harding