I wanted to follow up on this thread with additional information I have found. I figured out that any newspaper articles that note a Clarion Golf Club is referring to a Golf Club in Clarion, PA with a golf course that was laid out at its fair grounds. This Club had completely different officers than the Clarion County Golf Club aka Foxburg Country Club. The confusion lies in the similarity of the names and that both Clubs were reported in the local paper The Clarion Democrat.
Below is a 1917 full page article showing portraits of the many early officers of the Foxburg Country Club. This article notes that the Foxburg CC was the first known golf links west of the Allegheny Mountains. By 1934 and 1938 the below articles tout that Foxburg CC is the oldest club organized in the US. Then there is a 1952 USGA article reporting that Foxburg CC is the oldest course in the US based primarily on recollections of Foxburg CC members from 1947 to 1950, who were still alive. The USGA article does note that "there are no first hand documentary records concerning either the first rounds of golf or subsequent organization of the Foxburg Golf Club". The article goes on to note "The precise dates on which the course was laid out and the club organized cannot now be recalled". Harry Harvey, a longtime officer and member of the Club, recollects in the article that Foxburg CC was organized in 1887 and he was elected Secretary and Treasurer, a position he held for 54 years. Harvey also recollects that in 1887 the Club was playing golf on the ground of the present day Club.
I believe that Foxburg CC is an old course but is it the oldest? There seems to be conflict in the evidence I have found. Harry Harvey in the 1952 USGA Article claims a date of organization as 1887. Five other members in their notarized recollections all agree with Harvey. The thing is, many of them knew each other into old age and also knew of the claim of the oldest course from at least 1934. So is this a case of oral tradition as opposed to fact? Harry Harvey managed to lose the notebook of Club records that might have proved it.
Harry Harvey's recollected date of 1887 is in conflict with more contemporaneous info. Early Golf Guides from 1899 to 1902 all note that the Foxburg CC aka Clarion County GC was laid out in June 1893 by Joseph M. Fox and the Club was organized in 1893. The American Annual Golf Guides from 1916 to 1929 all note the Foxburg CC was established in 1891. Then there is a mention in a 1907 book titled "A Few Scraps Oily and Otherwise" by Alfred Smiley. In a chapter about the town of Foxburg, Smiley states "The Golf Club was the second organized in the State (PA)". If Smiley is correct then how does that fit into the Harvey date of 1887 and the oldest Club in the US? Finally, the biggest conflict to the Harvey 1887 date and even the Golf Guide dates of 1891 or 1893 are the two newspaper articles I posted earlier from 1896 and 1897 reporting the organization of the Clarion County Golf Club and naming officer names. Why would the Club have been organized time and time again?
I find the date of 1887 a sketchy claim for Foxburg CC's beginning, given all the conflicting evidence. Perhaps the human desire to beat the 1888 date of the St. Andrews Golf Club of Yonkers, NY was quite strong.
Foxburg Country Club mention, 23 Aug 1917 Clarion, PA Democrat newspaper, page 17Foxburg Golf Club oldest article, 12 Jul 1934 Kane, PA Republican newspaperFoxburg Country Club oldest article, 17 Aug 1938 Warren, PA Times Mirror newspaperApr 1952 USGA Journal snip, page 5Apr 1952 USGA Journal snip, page 6Harry Harvey recollection, 1952 USGA articleClarion County Golf Club listing, 1900 Harpers Official Golf GuideFoxburg Country Club listing, 1916 American Annual Golf Guide, page 249Clarion County Golf Club article, 19 May 1896 New York, NY The Evening Post newspaperFoxburg Golf Club organized article, 2 May 1897 Pittsburgh, PA Press newspaper