Chicago has a great golf history and there are courses for everyone. From $10 - $150 daily fee options to some "Top 100" courses, there are over 200 tracks within 50 miles of Chicago (and there is nothing but water east of the city!!) Ross, MacDonald, Flynn, Park, Bendelow, Wilson, Colt/Allison and even Norman, Fazio, Hills, Nicklaus and PB Dye, Chicago is well-represented.
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There are 30+ courses that make up the "top list" here and most have been covered above with general consensus on the top 3 or so. From the small and intimate to the large and loud, it"s all here. US Open venues, PGAs, regular tour stops, US Ams, Ryder Cup, Western Am and on.
However, as many private courses do not offer unaccompanied bookings - even if your pro from your home course makes a call - then you need to play with a member. If that's possible, then away you go. If it is not, then there are other courses (public and private) to perhaps explore. You may have better luck getting on.
1. Merit Club - great conditioning on a spectacular piece of land. Hosted 1999 Women's US Open.
2. The Glen Club - (not be confused with Glen View Club), a Tom Fazio semi-private course on an old Naval Air Station that hosts a Nationwide event annually
3. Conway Farms - private Fazio course that recently hosted Fedex Cup event
4. Olympia Fields - US Open on north course 10 years ago and i think the south course may be under construction. Heck, they may even offer you a membership here!
5. Glen Oak and Butterfield are close to Butler and Chi Golf and are very pleasant
6. Briarwood is another hidden gem (has some Dr. Mackenzie roots with Colt/Allison)
Just as CGC is one of the founding 5 clubs of the USGA, there are 4 clubs that make up the founding clubs of the CDGA - Midlothian, Glen View, Exmoor and Onwentsia. They are all worth playing.
- Doak and RGD did work at Onwentsia
- Pritchard did the restoration at Exmoor
- Urbina is about to complete restoration at Glen View (George waters did a lot of the bunker shaping)
- Midlo is thinking about doing something I hear
But, if you favor venues that have starters with head sets and tee times then you may just not appreciate the nuances of the older courses. And, if you dislike north side courses...well, just because...we are used to that here. It's like baseball as there are two major league teams in Chicago. The Cubs play in a grimy 100 year old stadium in the middle of a residential part on the north side of the city and is known as one of "the best bars in the country". The White Sox play in a large, generic monolith right next to the interstate on the south side. South side fans love the White Sox and Sox fans hate the Cubs and everything "north side".
Meanwhile, Cubs' fans just don"t care about the White Sox. Period...;-)