Heritage
A community-built course.
Grown from volunteer labor, neighborly support, and a love of the game — Arrowhead Meadows is rooted in White Sulphur Springs and the people who made it possible.
1980s — today
Built by volunteers, shaped by seasons.
Early 1980s
An idea takes root
Local fundraising and volunteer work begin. Neighbors donate time and equipment to carve a playable nine-hole layout from the valley floor.
Late 1980s
First rounds
After years of steady work, the course opens for play — a milestone that still defines how Arrowhead Meadows feels: approachable, scrappy, and deeply local.
1990s–2000s
Refinement
Thoughtful improvements over the decades — new plantings, refined holes, and the kind of small-target greens that make you think your way around the property.
Today
Quiet stewardship
Volunteer support continues. The par-four ninth, tree-lined and strategic, is often talked about as a memorable closer on the way back to the clubhouse.
Details summarized from public reporting (e.g. MontanaSports.com, Visit Montana). If you have a correction or a story to add, we’d love to hear it at the shop.
Mission in one sentence
“Keep public golf alive in the valley — affordable rounds, honest conditions, and a welcome mat for beginners and scratch players alike.”
As a not-for-profit style operation, resources tend to flow back into the course itself rather than distant shareholders — a model that matches how Arrowhead Meadows was born.
Walk the course with us.
Tee times by phone — we’ll tell you what’s playing firm and fast this week.