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The Homestead: A throwback for any day

HOT SPRINGS, Va. — The second least populous county in Virginia can argue it has had the greatest golfing influence on the Commonwealth. 

HOT SPRINGS, Va. — The second least populous county in Virginia can argue it has had the greatest golfing influence on the Commonwealth. 

The 535 square miles that hug the West Virginia border in a remote forested refuge known as Bath County produced the legendary touring pro Sam Snead, three-time U.S. Ryder Cup team member J.C. Snead, and a remarkable 40 some other golf pros over the years.

It’s an area of the country that has virtually stood still for years, where doors are left unlocked and you fish, hunt or play golf — and wake up the next day and do it all over again. 

Snead was born and died in Bath County, but early in his pro career made it across the border to work as head golf professional at rival Greenbrier Resort in White Sulphur Springs, W. Va.

“But locally, everybody knows he’s from here,” snaps J.C. Snead, his nephew. “I’ve had arguments with people that say ‘No, he’s from West Virginia.’ One guy got really belligerent and I thought I was going to have to smack him.” 

While the elder Snead has been gone now for nearly 16 years, those around these parts are still protective of the native son’s legacy they all followed into flat stick fame.   

“You would be surprised that some people even think he’s from North Carolina, from Greensboro. They get Greensboro and the Greenbrier mixed up since he won eight times in Greensboro,” said Don Ryder, who served as the Omni Homestead Resort's director of golf for 42 years. “He played a lot at The Homestead in his later life. He was up on the driving range almost every day.”

Mark Fry can attest to that. The current head professional was in charge of running the resort’s golf schools back then and would marvel at Snead’s mass appeal. 

“There was this mystique when he would show up with that hat on,” Fry said. “My golf school would just stop. He was cordial to take pictures and sign autographs. He had a reputation of being hard to approach, but you have to remember when he was in his prime he was in his office when he was on the golf course. There are a lot of times I don’t want somebody to barge into my office uninvited when I’m busy … and he was busy on the golf course. 

“I can still see him hitting balls up there. Later in life he couldn’t see how far they were going, but he would look over at me and say: ‘It just hit the ground, didn’t it?’ So, he knew how long it was in the air — just amazing.” 

Can you imagine the social media explosion that would occur if Snead were still alive and he was walking around The Homestead in his unassuming down-home fashion? 

Playing 36 holes in the center of the Alleghany Mountains is like opening up a history book and turning page-after-page, anxiously awaiting the next chapter. 

In 1899, William McKinley teed off on the Old Course at The Homestead Resort to become the first sitting president to play golf. Many more have followed suit here, including William Taft, Woodrow Wilson, Dwight Eisenhower and Gerald Ford. In fact, Wilson loved the golf so much he played a round every morning of his honeymoon while on site.

The resort, which became an Omni property in 2013, celebrated its 250th anniversary in 2016 with birthday cake in the lobby each day and fireworks each night, but little has changed here over the years. 

The hotel’s architectural splendor still rockets into the sky and serves as the backdrop for the final hole of the Old Course, which boasts the oldest first tee in continuous use in the United States. 

Meanwhile, the Cascades was ranked the No. 1 course in Virginia for 82 consecutive years until recently and was a course Snead battled many times. 

“Few courses have stood the test of time like the Cascades,” Fry said. 

“One of the most famous quotes is on statue of Sam on the first tee, and it says 'If you can shoot par or better at the Cascades you can play anywhere in the world.’ Of course, he traveled the world and did just that. He knew what a test that course was,” Ryder said. 

At just 6,667 yards from the tips, the Cascades course has lulled thousands of golfers into a false sense of comfort, security and downright frustration. 

“I had a friend in here one time who owns a golf course in Kansas and is about a 6 handicap, and we walked on to the first tee and I said ‘You want to play the blue tees or the white?’ Ryder recalled. “He looked at the card and said ‘6,600, awe, we’ll play the blue tees.’ I said, ‘Remember, you said that.’ He looked at me kind of funny, and the next day he couldn’t get up on the white tees fast enough.”

The Old Course is even shorter at 6,099 yards, but there is nary a flat fairway lie or a straight putt to be found. Heading up into the higher elevations of the resort property, the Old Course is a diabolical test of left-is-right, up-is-down … well, you get the blurry picture. 

“When I was playing on the PGA Tour I would hit driver on every hole at the Old Course for practice to make myself concentrate on hitting it in a certain place,” J.C. Snead said. “You can get every kind of lie you can think of in golf. You’ll play with people from the South where it’s not that hilly and they don’t have a clue how to play it.”

But play the courses golfers did. The resort logged more than 53,000 rounds annually for more than a decade during the golf boom from 1993-2003.  

“The Homestead and the Cascades course have been to amateur golf what Pinehurst has been to professional golf,” Ryder said. “We’ve hosted over 200 Virginia state championships, eight USGA championships, an NCAA championship, you name it. 

“Golf has been No. 1 in this county besides maybe eating for years and years and years. At one time, we had just golfers coming here. It is now promoted as more of a family business, but golf still plays a huge part.”

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Despite its remote location, there is no shortage of recreational options year-round at The Homestead. (Photo: The Omni Homestead Resort)

For Fry, it’s pretty simple, much like the days when J.C. Snead used to shag balls for 50 cents, walk into town with his sister to get a soda, some chips and head back over the mountain to home. 

“For me, the Homestead has given me an opportunity to live in Bath County – to walk outside and smell the fresh air, feel the breeze; you don’t hear any horns blowing and you don’t hear any traffic," he said. "It is such an attraction to live here, to raise your family here. This place gives me that opportunity.”

It’s an opportunity golfers from across the country can experience firsthand, too.

THE ESSENTIALS
The Omni Homestead Resort
Location: 
Hot Springs, Va.
Website: www.omnihotels.com
Phone: 800.838.1766
Facebook: @OmniHomesteadResort
Instagram: 
@omnihomestead
Twitter: @OmniHomestead

David Droschak was an award-winning writer with The Associated Press for 20 years. He was honored with the Sports Writer of the Year award in North Carolina in 2003. He lives in Apex, N.C.

Email: ddroschak@earthlink.net