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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Hayden Lake Country Club

The Hayden Lake Country Club, which started out as a collection of cabins on a beach on the lake’s west side, has long been the place to see and be seen for the well-to-do of Kootenai and Spokane counties.

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Image One The King Collection | The Spokesman-Review
Image Two Kathy Plonka | The Spokesman-Review
The Hayden Lake Country Club, which started out as a collection of cabins on a beach on the lake's west side, has always been the place to see and be seen for the well-to-do of Kootenai and Spokane counties. It opened in 1907. The idyllic setting, with the first 18-hole golf course in Idaho, drew people from around the region,--who rode the electric railroad from Spokane to Coeur d'Alene and then a spur line to Hayden Lake--to eat in the Kirtland Cutter-designed clubhouse, to play golf on the grounds designed by J.C. Olmstead and to boat on the placid waters. President William Howard Taft said he enjoyed eating a dinner of wild game in the clubhouse in 1909. Bing Crosby became a member in the 1940s and lived next door part of each year. The facility was originally called the Bozanta Tavern and, later, the Coeur d'Alene Country Club at Hayden Lake before changing to the current name in 1985.

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