This is my second day on GolfClubAtlas and my first post/topic ever. I am honored to be apart of this group. I could tell a long story about me and my affiliation with a golf course I just bought/invested in with a number of other locals, Hooper Golf Course, but I will keep it brief as I can for now and I can share details if people show interest. This will be a long post and will exceed teh 2000 character limit, so I will make multiple posts to get the story down.
BACKGROUND: Hooper Golf Course is in my small town called Walpole, NH. It was formerly known as Hooper Golf Club since 1927 until recently. Hooper was designed by Wayne Stiles and John Van Kleek. My great great grandfather had a heavy hand in writing and forming the Hooper Trust, which included the golf course and an agricultural institute across the street for high school students interested in farming careers. The profits from the golf course were designed to feed the interest-bearing trust that the Institute benefited from.
In 2010, the state of NH Attorney General's office claimed the club failed to pay adequate property taxes for so long, forcing the "club" and board to cease and for the course to be sold to a private buyer or group. The appraisal price (and required sale price) was around $1.2M. The townspeople were able to raise a significant chunk of money to put the course and surrounding property in conservation easement to keep the property from commercial and residential development, thereby lowering the sale price by a few hundred grand, leaving the price at $739,500. For years there was no buyer. The course continued to be maintained by volunteers, wage workers, and paying members. Someone was able to get the state-required sale price down to $500,000. Still 2 or 3 years went by with no buyer.
Last April a gentleman (we'll call him Mr. D) in town bought the property, which included the 50-acre course, 50 acres of woodlands, an old mansion that used to be known as Watkins Tavern, the cart barn, small pro shop, and a cottage property between 7 green and 8 tee. However, he had no interest in owning a golf course, just the buildings.
Immediately after the purchase, I and 5 others quickly got together to plan to buy the course from Mr. D., develop a business structure for the course, and recruit more local investors to participate. We organized various committees: Executive, Pro shop, Greens, Marketing and Membership committees. We amassed 25 investors at $25,000 apiece. We figured $625,000 would be enough to buy the course from Mr. D., and have working capital to buy much needed equipment, spruce up the course and keep it operating for the few years it may take to turn profits that can be reinvested. By Fall 2019 we had everything organized and we needed lawyers to make the LLC legit with NH. That took until 3 weeks ago before the we took actual ownership of the course.
CURRENTLY: Now we have a course owned by 25 locals, half of them non-golfers, and the course is opening this weekend and we're doing our best to drum up excitement and recruit more members like we used to have until 2008. There's a long list of things we've done in the off season to improve the course. In December I took a stroll on the course with an author who quickly became my friend, Anthony Pioppi. He wrote about Hooper in his recent book, The Finest Nines, where he puts Hooper at #7 Bets 9-Hole course in North America. Tome Doak puts it even higher on his list, as described in The Confidential Guide vol 3. The recommendations from Pioppi agree with what Doak also suggested to me a couple years ago: remove trees, and return the greens to their original sizes.
Over the winter our Super took down over 100 trees surrounding the course to improve airflow and sunshine on the turn, and some truly awful looking evergreens on the course. It is looking much closer to its original appearance in photos from the course's early days. We will be growing long fescue in areas out of the range of play, and where only long hitters can knock it. Some day we'll have the funds to improve our bunker conditions.