Quarry Oaks Golf Club
Quarry Oaks Golf Club
16600 Quarry Oaks Dr
Ashland, NE 68003-3820
United States
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Overview
From Golf Digest Architecture Editor emeritus Ron Whitten: Quarry Oaks Golf Club lists its address as Ashland, Neb., but in truth it's closer to the little town of South Bend, named for the big turn of the Platte River as it makes its way east to the Missouri River. The Platte bends south because it butts up against limestone bluffs. The river has deposited a lot of sand here, which has been mined for generations, along with the limestone. Towns like Ashland were established around sand and gravel pits and cement and lime factories.
This is the river whose banks I explored as a kid. I also explored it once as an adult, back in 1989, when my friend Dick Youngscap, who had established Firethorn Golf Club in Lincoln a few years earlier, invited me to join him to scout out a possible new course location. Dick had been following the progress of the then-proposed Mahoney State Park, midway between Omaha and Lincoln, right off I-70. He knew the state was planning to build an interstate exit there, so he figured he'd bring in Pete Dye (who'd done Firethorn) and have him build a boffo public course easily accessible to tourists.
The land we looked at was an old limestone quarry-turned-cattle farm owned by the Abel family, George, Betty and their son, Jim. Dick and I wandered around the high pastures along the south edge, then moved north into good-sized hills covered in oaks. We stopped abruptly on cliffs some 70 feet above the Platte River Valley, a marvelous view, then trudged down rugged bluffs, up a couple of narrow draws (the perfect width for golf holes) and back down again. We came upon a chasm that had slumped down to the river (a possible dramatic par 3) and toward the end of the day, we found a secluded mine pit nearly encircled by vertical cliffs, with a small pond in the middle. I was especially captivated with this quarry, envisioning it as a finishing hole, with a clubhouse on the rim. Youngscap wasn't sure the quarry was big enough for anything but a par 3.
On the ride back to Lincoln, Dick asked me what I thought. Interesting site, I told him, and great location, but if it were me, I'd buy some land out in the sand hills of central Nebraska and build an authentic links. "The sand hills?" Dick said. "Who the hell would go out to the sand hills to play golf?"
A few years later, Youngscap attended the wedding of a niece out in the sand hills and called me that night. "You weren't kidding," he said. "There are golf holes out here everywhere you look." He soon bought some land, hired Bill Coore and Ben Crenshaw, and the rest, goes the cliche, is history.
Meanwhile, the Abel family liked the idea of a golf course on their land and in 1995 hired John LaFoy of South Carolina to design them a public course on the very piece of property that Dick and I had scouted. The course, named Quarry Oaks, opened in 1996 and so impressed Golf Digest panelists that it was named Best New Affordable Public Course of 1997.
On a site that looks like the Smoky Mountains, the use of a South Carolina golf architect makes perfect sense. Fairways rise along oak-dotted hills and tumble through valleys punctuated by rock outcroppings. The par-5 12th, a boomerang luge run offering the first glimpse of the Platte beyond the green, is in a draw that Dick and I had walked up and back some years before. The 15th is the par 3 over the chasm that Youngscap and I had envisioned. The kicker is the 394-yard 17th. The quarry that had so enthralled me was indeed big enough to contain a par 4. From tee boxes atop a sheer wall of rock, the 17th plays down into a quiet glade of cottonwood and birch to an apostrophe of a fairway that turns left to a green fronted by a dark pool of water. Shots echo in this secluded enclave.
But the Abels didn't build a clubhouse on the rim of this quarry. I don't know if they even considered it. The clubhouse, parking lot and practice range are out on sensible pastureland, reached by the par-5 18th, which emerges up a draw with a cascading stream along the right and the green tucked beyond one last cluster of oaks.
I admit I'm smitten. Just two minutes from the Mahoney State Park exit ramp, Quarry Oaks is definitely a course worth getting off the interstate to play.
POSTSCRIPT: In 2023, the club brought back LaFoy for a renovation. The work included broadening the fairways and removing select trees. Each bunkers was rebuild, some moved and some added, and the entire course was regressed including the greens. A new Frank Lloyd Wright prairie-style clubhouse is also under construction.
About
Awards
ranking history:
100 Greatest Public: Ranked from 2003-'10.
Highest ranking: 55th, 2009-'10.
Best in State: Ranked inside the top five, 1999, 2003-'10. Ranked inside the top 10, 2001, 2011-'16, 2019-'22. Ranked 14th, 2025-'26.
Previous ranking: NR.
2025-'26 ranking: 14th.
Panelists
Ratings from our panel of 1,900 course-ranking panelists
100 GREATEST/BEST IN STATE SCORES
Shot Options
Character
Challenge
Layout Variety
Fun
Aesthetics
Conditioning
Reviews
Review
“The recent renovation made a noticeable improvement to this course, particularly the removal of trees to open sight lines and views. The routing is largely unchanged. The long par 4 ninth has been stretched into a par 5 and presents a nice risk/reward hole to finish the front side. The back is where you notice the tree removal the most as it opens the views of the river and the addition of a tee box on top of an old dynamite storage bunker adds to the character of the course. Quarry Oaks is a notch below the spectacular courses in the Nebraska sand hills to the west, but still one of the nicest golf facilities open to the public in the state."
Read More2025
Review
“I enjoyed the renovation of Quarry Oaks. While the layout remains mostly the same, a few changes helped to enhance the course. First, adjusting the 9th to a par 5 was brilliant. As a par 4, that hole was brutal. Though the green is small for a par 5 which could be reachable, the design elevates the risk-reward of trying to get home in two. Second, the removal of trees. Quarry Oaks had grown a bit furry in recent years with trees unnecessarily encroaching on play and blocking views. The vast removal allows the design to stand on its own. You can see the architect's intended lines of play and the aesthetics are vastly improved. The Platte River can be seen again on the 12th green, which now creeps into your mind on your 3rd into that tricky green. Similar to the 9th, all the par 5s are risk-reward holes. A good drive gives you the chance to get home or close in two. And the green complexes around the hole are fraught with challenge, not making par a guarantee. The green complexes at Quarry Oaks are outstanding. A lot of undulations which are fair and playable, nothing too outlandish. I enjoyed the balance design with a wonderful mixture of par 3s and par 4s. Though a few holes are challenging and beefy, those are evened out with a handful of short, scorable holes. I love how the renovation allowed the course to lean into its history as a former quarry. Unearthing the dynamite storage shed and adding a tee to its top added to the course's story and character. Pace of play on that hole and keeping the grass growing could be a challenge. But I hope Quarry Oaks keeps that as part of the course as its a memorable and unique experience. Though the front 9 lacks the views of the back, the surroundings of either the course or the surround forest make for a peaceful and pleasant natural setting. Combined, these factors helped to make the round more fun. The course was still growing in from the redesign and into summer when I played in late May. But I found conditions to be good throughout. Though Quarry Oaks is investing into the clubhouse with the hopes of making it a wedding, corporate, and community hotspot, the essence of Quarry Oaks remains the same; a quality golf course. Overall, a nice renovation of the course and after almost two years of being closed for the project, a restoration of Quarry Oaks as an outstanding public golf course."
Read More2025
Review
“Definitely Top 100 public. Amazing esthetics!"
Read More2025
Review
“I thought they absolutely maximized the aesthetics on this course for the property they had. A wonderful routing."
Read More2025
Review
“This is a great use of an old quarry on the Platte River. Lots of elevation changes, and a great routing through the property. If more reclamation projects like this took place as it creates some dramatic holes and fun greens. That said, you can tell the course is not what it was when it opened. On their yardage book, many holes have numerous tee boxes that have grown over and they are no longer maintained by the club. Also, stay and do the replay and play 36 in one day. Makes for a great day trip from the Lincoln/Omaha area."
Read More2018