COURSE REVIEWS
Lees Hill Provides Multi-Dimensional Golfing Experience
By Jeffrey
A. Rendall,
TravelGolf.com Senior Writer
Photos by Jeffrey A. Rendall for OldDominionGolf.com
FREDERICKSBURG, VA -- Few would disputetheres a timeless quality to historical sites. Even fewer would contest the notion--when youre at one, the past inspires the present. Sure, history is dimensional, very much part of our perceptive human world of time and space, but you can never quite escape from the reality that something important happened here.
Such is the feeling youll get at Lees Hill Golfers Club in Fredericksburg, Virginia (about an hour south of Washington DC). The course is placed in and around 19th century Confederate army campsites, occupied during the Fredericksburg Campaign of 1862-63. Several landmarks remain plainly visible nearly 139 years latermainly earthworks dug out to protect the Southern army against invasion from the north. General Robert E. Lee selected this land for his headquarters, and many of the wars legends spent considerable time here.
In other wordsyes, the men who occupied the place are long gone, and so are their tents, cooking utensils, rifles and campfires. But something tangible remains, long after their wars outcome was decided. At Lees Hill, you cant help but come face to face with the pastbecause its all around you. Must be kind of spooky to walk through it on a cool, moonlit winter evening.
It doesnt hurt that today theres a golf course on
the property to distract from heavy notions of the struggle between
life and death. No sliced drive or missed three footer could ever
hurt as much as what the soldiers endured, so the folks at Lees
Hill give golfers the best of the past and present. The layout
is a Bill Love (of Ault, Clark and Associates) design that opened
in October of 1993the first of the new breed
of upscale golf courses now surrounding the Washington DC metro
area.
Leave it to historic ground to start a new trend. We all benefit from the propertys current use as well as its weighty history lessons.
Being a history buff, I gave the past a great deal of thought
the day I played Lees Hill, but the golf course didnt
take a back seat to my intellectual ponderings. Its not
tremendously long at 6,834 yards from the tips and a par of 72,
but here, power bows to intelligent play. Most of the holes are
bordered by woods, water or wetlands (and, in fairness, a few
houses)--this isnt a layout where you can bang it into the
next fairway and still make par. But at the same time, you can
club down off the tee of many holes, so what the course takes
away in breadth, it giveth back in lack of length.
I wouldnt exactly call it a target course, but placement and club selection rules the day at Lees Hill in 2001. Its a different (and much safer) kind of target practice than in the 1860sand you wont even have to march in formation to receive your dismissal at chow time.
Chad Maes, Lees Hills Head Golf Professional, says the courses strongest suit is the subtle changes it makes each time you give it a shot: Any chance I get, my clubs are going out therebecause the holes are always a little different. Some little change of a tee from hole to hole or day to dayyou know, they move the tee markers just a slight bit in the tee box, or the pin placement on some of the greens, and its a totally different hole.
It always keeps you guessing and thinking out there, so you never get bored with it, Maes adds.
Maes compares it to another place in his employment past, Augustine
Golf Club, just 14 miles up I-95. Both places have terrific
layoutsand always pose a challenge to me. They dont
get easier from day to day, and thats perfect. Lees
Hill certainly does have a lot of Augustines aesthetic qualitieshence,
a fair comparison.
The only difference being some conditioning issuesbut Lees Hill is less expensive than its more upscale neighbor to the north. Maes says some of the issues will be addressed in the future by irrigating the rough areas, making conditioning more uniform. Thick rough wasnt a problem on the day I was there, howeverrecent storms had made it quite omnipresent. The thought U.S Open came to mind several times.
Adding to the variety and difficulty are the contoured fairways. It seems that shorter courses make up for length in certain wayshazards, rough, or uneven liesor all three. Lees Hill fits the description. Maes says a lot of the fairways slope towards the trouble, mandating even more precision from the tee to avoid getting into it.
At the same time, as previously noted, youll be able to
club down from the tee box to give yourself that added accuracy.
All around, its a pretty balanced equation, just like the
physical dimensions of space and time. If only Albert Einstein
played golf, he mightve discovered E=MC squared by playing
at Lees Hill. Okay, probably not.
Start your journey through time on the first hole, a relatively tame 403 yard par four, dogleg right with a great deal of room on the tee ball and generous second shot possibilities. A relatively easy hole to start the round with.
The second represents the greatest challenge on the course (#1 handicap hole), a brawny 579 yard three-shot par five thatll test your abilities on all three shots to give yourself a birdie try. Maes says the tee shot is the keyif you want any chance to have a short iron third, youll need to keep the ball in the short grass with the big dog. I found out he was right, though I did make a good par by one-putting after a solid fourth shot.
The fourth is the toughest par four on the front, a 446 yard, dogleg right with a downhill, semi-blind tee shot. Despite the yardage, you may want to take less club off the tee, for accuracys sake--but then youll need to take more into the elevated green. Tough hole.
The fifth is Lees Hills signature hole, 150 yard par
three that plays much tougher than the yardage indicates. Theres
trouble everywhere and the greens pretty small. Maes says,
If the pins on the right-hand side, and the tee boxes
are also over there, the green looks like the top of a pin. Youre
thinking I have an 8 or a 9 iron in my hands, and Im
nervous about hitting the ball.
Nines a potentially drivable 316 yarder, slight dogleg left with a narrowing fairway close to the green and sizeable bunkers in front. Fun to take a poke at, and you can still make birdie even if youre not in the short grass.
Turning to the back, the tenth is a tough par five, 554 yards and doglegged left. The tee shots the ultimate risk reward, as the more water you take on, the more leg youll cut. The second shots not easy either, as the fairway slopes down towards the water, and its very visually intimidating. Nice hole concept.
Twelves the back nines most demanding par four, 440 yards and a dogleg rightwith water all down the right side. If you choose to keep it left with your tee ball, you may end up in the rough or the trees, as the ball could roll throughas I found out. Again, accuracy is key.
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Eighteen is truly a classic finishing hole. From the back tees, its 605 yards, and it looks like youre hitting through a chute of trees to the narrow fairway. Avoid the left side, as even a good drive in that direction may roll into the lake that juts in just perfectly to catch an unsuspecting tee ball. Theres lots of room to the right, howevereven more than appears from the tee. Great hole.
Ill let Chad Maes sum up your day at Lees Hill. I want people, when they come here, to feel like they came out and played with three of their best friends, and that its something they want to do every year, whether they play it a hundred times or just once. We may not have the biggest staff, or the most people out there working for us, but well definitely make your day enjoyable. I couldnt put it any better. And it all goes to show, when youre mixing in history, great golf and a winning layout, time and space are really just relative.
Lee's Hill Golf Club
10200 Old Dominion Parkway
Fredericksburg, VA 22408
540-891-0111
540-891-5258 - fax
703-927-2133 - cell
www.leeshillgc.com
PGA General Manager: Michael Kummer
Head Golf Professional: Michael Kummer
Sales & Marketing Director: Kathy Sykes
Course Superintendent: Brian Roubaush
Tees/Yardage/Slope
Cannon 6834 128
Rifle 6268 130
Saber 5925 117
Pistol 5064 115
Rates: (Seven days a week)
M Th: $36; Fri: $42
Weekends, $52. All prices include cart fee.
After 2 p.m, M-F, $33. $38 on weekends.



