Pine Needles was always meant to be the stern younger brother of Mid Pines and indeed the resort lived up to that promise under the guidance of Peggy Kirk Bell by hosting three US Women’s Opens in the unprecedented span of 11 years between 1996 and 2007. Make no mistake, to a large degree that first Open was a tribute to Bell’s work in golf. Anyone remotely familiar with her career will know she was a strong advocate of the game and in particular the role of women in golf. Ownership of Pine Needles Lodge & GC for more than 60 years is testament to these facts. Mrs Bell started one of the first golf schools in the country, was a founding member of the LPGA and served as Honorary Chairwoman of the Peggy Kirk Bell Girls Golf Tour which was founded in 2007. An unsurpassed link to golf’s rich past was lost when Mrs Bell died in November of 2016.
After the great success of Pinehurst and with the backing of many northern investors who were well acquainted with Pinehurst (including HH Rackham, the famed Detroit businessmen and philanthropist who previously engaged Ross to design the public Rackham course in the Detroit suburb of Huntington Woods) the Tufts family purchased a 5200 acre parcel of heavily wooded and hilly land about 4 miles east of Pinehurst in Southern Pines. Knollwood was planned as a 36 hole (possibly more) housing development complex and recreation area. The development included the grand Pine Needles Inn which still stands behind the 2
nd tee of Pine Needles though today it is called St Joseph of the Pines....a senior health care home. Aiding the budding club, which was meant to be a getaway from the busy Pinehurst Resort, was the nearby train station and Donald Ross designed courses (he also was on the Knollwood Board of Directors). All seemed aligned for success if not for the onslaught of the Great Depression. To ease the strain on the Pinehurst Resort, Knollwood was sold. In 1953 Pine Needles was purchased by Warren and Peggy Kirk Bell. The Bells also acquired Mid Pines in the early 1990s and thus the two courses were reunited under a sole ownership and one of the great American golf resorts was fully realized.
Opened one year shy of the Great Depression, it is a wonder the Donald Ross designed Pine Needles survived, but survive it did! Pine Needles Lodge & GC has done so well recently that it is currently in the finishing stages of a Kyle Franz renovation. Kyle is no stranger to work in the Sand Hills as he was responsible for the award winning renovation of neighbouring Mid Pines in 2013. Besides a wealth of experience on many well received courses, Kyle also worked on some of the best courses in the world which include Pinehurst #2, Pacific Dunes and Barnbougle. Always a fine course, but Kyle’s touch gave Mid Pines an essential lacking ingredient, being of and in the Sand Hills. Prior to the renovation Mid Pines could have been in any southeastern location, now Mid Pines is unmistakably a Sand Hills course.
By the time Pine Needles was designed and constructed, Ross was a master of his craft and he better understood how to tease more natural shaping from his Frank Maples (he was essentially the construction foreman for all the Ross courses around Pinehurst) led crew in a more efficient manner than for previous projects. It is remarkable that with very few tweaks Ross was able to unveil this remarkable design as a finished product in 1928. To this day Pine Needles remains one of Ross’ best and most revered courses.
The opening par 5 makes a strong argument for the best hole on the course. Drifting right, up and over a rise, this is as good an opener as one will hope to find.
The green reveals itself from the rear. The bunker in view is beautifully tied to the green.
Amazingly, the ornate St Joseph of the Pines stands proudly behind the the 2nd tee. That is D Ross teeing off.
The second offers a speed slot down the left, but approaching from the right may be a better option to access hole locations...pick your poison. With morning shadows obscuring the view, it wasn't clear the green runs away from play. Thankfully, with a bit of experience it is possible to bump shots up to the greens.
I am rarely taken by short holes over water, but the simple beauty of the 3rd is smashing. The extension of the pine needles to the back left bunker completes the picture. The green was extended a bit to the rear right and is meant to be a Sunday hole location.
Playing over water in a similar manner to the 10th, the carry on #4 is deceptively long and the left bunker is just about where one wants to be! Once again, details such as the pine needles crowding the bunker create a far more natural scene.
The steep uphill approach is the only one of this sort at Pine Needles.
More to follow.
Ciao