The Story
The Wilderness belongs to the Bois Forte Band of Chippewa, whose lands sit on the shore of Lake Vermilion in far northern Minnesota, some 45 miles south of the Canadian border. When the Band decided to add a championship golf course to its Fortune Bay Resort Casino, it hired architect Jeffrey D. Brauer and gave him the kind of site most designers only sketch in daydreams: ancient granite ridges, stands of towering pine and birch, and the blue sprawl of one of Minnesota's great walleye lakes. The course opened in 2004.
Brauer's answer to the land was to leave it in charge. Fairways run generous between rock and forest, tees perch on outcroppings, and the exposed granite — some of the oldest rock on the continent — frames holes instead of hiding behind them. The golf world noticed immediately: Travel + Leisure Golf named it among the best new courses of 2004, and in 2005 it was crowned America's best new upscale public course. Every hole carries the name of something that lives here — the 649-yard opener is 'White Pine,' the ninth is 'The Beaver' — a quiet reminder of whose woods these are.
Two decades on, The Wilderness has settled into its reputation as one of the great public-golf road trips in America — a fixture atop Minnesota's course rankings and a regular on Golf Digest's list of the country's 100 greatest public courses. It is a long drive from anywhere, and that is precisely the point. You come for the golf; you remember the silence between shots, the granite glowing in evening light, and the feeling of playing a course that treats the Northwoods as a partner rather than a backdrop.