Royal Musselburgh Golf Club

It is the oldest golf trophy that has been played for continuously in the world, and it can be seen in the Clubhouse.

In 1811 the first Lady Golfer competition took place, and in 1834 the club issued a new set of rules.

In 1922 the Club entered a new era through the move to Prestongrange House and Estate, made possible through CISWO, the Coal Industry Social Welfare Organisation.

The new clubhouse was a 12th-century historic house, originally owned by the monks of Newbattle Abbey.

An 18-hole course was designed by renowned golf course architect James Braid as a traditional parkland course, yet close to the sea.

Prestongrange House is the clubhouse of the Royal Musselburgh Golf Club