Ansley Golf Club: Midtown Course
5500 Settindown Dr, Roswell, GA 30075Designed by Stewart Maiden · Est. 1912
The Midtown Course at Ansley Golf Club, affectionately nicknamed "The Old Lady" by members, is a nine-hole layout tucked into the Ansley Park neighborhood just north of downtown Atlanta. Opened in 1912 to a Stewart Maiden routing, the course is one of Georgia's oldest surviving layouts and has been ranked among the top nine-hole courses in the country, with skyline views framing every shot.
History
Ansley Golf Club began as an amenity of Edwin P. Ansley's Ansley Park residential development, one of Atlanta's earliest planned neighborhoods. Ground was broken on the first clubhouse in 1910, and in 1912 the course and facility were named Ansley Park Golf Club. The course was designed by Stewart Maiden, a Scottish-born professional and teacher from Carnoustie who had emigrated to the United States and was then based at East Lake Country Club in Atlanta.
Maiden is best known today as the swing mentor to Bobby Jones, a connection that further anchors Ansley in Atlanta golf history. The nine-hole Midtown course has remained at its original Ansley Park site for more than a century, earning the nickname "The Old Lady" from generations of members. The layout occupies a compact footprint within the residential neighborhood near downtown, with holes framed by mature trees and views of the Atlanta skyline. Sports Illustrated has ranked the Midtown course among the top five nine-hole courses in the United States, reflecting both its historical significance and its quality of design.
The club was renamed Ansley Golf Club in 1953. The facility expanded in the 1930s with a swimming pool and other amenities, and subsequent generations maintained the course's golden-age character. In 1999, Ansley Golf Club acquired the Settindown Creek Golf Club in Roswell, Georgia, an 18-hole Bob Cupp design, giving members a second venue with a championship-length course. The Midtown clubhouse underwent major renovations between 2015 and 2020 to modernize the member facilities while preserving the historic character.
The Midtown Course remains a 9-hole layout and is considered one of the oldest surviving golf courses in Georgia, still played on essentially its 1912 routing. Its position within the Ansley Park neighborhood, walkable from surrounding homes, captures the residential-club culture that defined American golf's early decades in the Southeast.