Kingsmill Resort - Virginia Golf


When you walk up the tree-lined fairway of the 383-yard 14th hole of the River Course at Kingsmill Resort in Williamsburg, VA, you might notice the vestiges of a path on the right near the woods. During Colonial times, farmers would transport their harvest in wagons to a mill over this path called the "Quarterpath Road" from the James River north over a line now marked by holes 13 - 17. The chimney of the old mill is visible off the 13th hole, a picturesque 179 one-shotter from a tee box beside a creek and pond surrounded by thick woods to a heavily bunkered elevated green flanked right by a steep ravine.

Golfers who enjoy parkland courses that thread along and through magnificent scenery of old trees, rolling hills, creeks and ponds, and a wide river, will find a bit of heaven on Pete Dye's River Course, site of the PGA Tour's Michelob Championship. Golfers who also love American history will have their imaginations fired as they walk over ground trod by Colonial settlers and soldiers of the American Revolution and Civil War.

Not many golf courses can boast having designated historical and archeological sites, but the resort's River and Plantation courses, as well as other areas of the resort property, have a slew of them.

On the rise left of the River Course's signature 17th , a 177-yard, tree-lined par 3 that looks high out over the James River, is the restored brick foundation of a tavern which was formerly called an "ordinary." Until it was burned to the ground in 1776, it was the Colonial version of the modern clubhouse, a place where local settlers gathered to discuss the affairs of the day over drafts of beer and shots of whiskey.

Immediately above and left of the elevated tee box on No. 17 is an earthen fortification used during the American Revolution and the Civil War. With a little imagination, players teeing it up on this imposing hole can hear the musket shots as Union and Confederate troops exchange gunfire.

Archeologists excavating the river bluffs east of the No. 18 tee box found stone tools, pottery and other pre-historic artifacts of Indian dwellers. These and many other historical items are on display at the resort.

The close connection between past and present is a unique feature of Kingsmill, a Mobil 4-Star 2,900-acre resort that offers 54 holes of the best parkland golf you will experience at any U.S. resort. In addition to the River course, a true championship test, and the very user-friendly Arnold Palmer-designed Plantation Course, the resort boasts the Woods Course, a Tom Clark-Curtis Strange collaboration which some say is the most popular layout on site.

Kingsmill Resort's amenities also include a superb tennis center, fishing, sailing, and a state-of-the-art health spa and fitness center with racquetball courts, a weight room, and massage and salon services. A conference center can handle good-sized business meetings. There is also swimming at indoor and outdoor pools by the main building and at a riverside beach where the marina is located.

Miles of hiking and biking trails meander through the tall forests and around the ponds and creeks of this property rich in unspoiled, protected natural beauty. In addition, the resort, whose accommodations include luxury riverside suites with kitchenettes and rooms and villas near the tennis center, provides transportation to Williamsburg's outstanding attractions including Busch Gardens (on site), a winery west of the city, and Colonial Williamsburg. *

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One-Piece Takeaway Cock your wrist up (not back), swing your arms back, turn your shoulders and rotate your forearms
Proper Body Movement: The Pivot Rotate around your axis and maintain the same posture throughout your swing in order to pivot properly
Proper Pitch Shot Technique CHRIS TOULSON demonstrates pitching basics including set up, wrist hinge, turning of the body and finish position