Virginia Golfer May / Jun 2018 | Page 12

( atc ) Member Clubs On Your Honor Take a step back in time at Clarke County’s no-frills Millwood Country Club by LEONARD SHAPIRO I ts members like to say they put the “country” in the Millwood Country Club, a charming and oh-so anachro- nistic nine-hole private golf course with enough different tee boxes all around to play 18 truly unique regulation holes as well as nine mor e on a par-3 layout. Nes- tled between several farms in rural Clarke County, about 15 miles east of Winchester, they also keep it plain and simple, just as most members prefer. There is no fancy clubhouse, no food service, no valet parking, no pro shop, and no practice facility other than a turf tee in front of a net and a small putting green. There also are no starting times—simply show up and tee off. And if there’s a group or two on No. 1, just scoot off to another hole and begin the round there. Dogs are also more than welcome to accompany members on the course, leash or no leash, much to the dismay of the occasional deer that wanders out of the woods. And just about everything is done on the honor system. 10 Need a cart? Just sign in, grab a key, and off you go. Bringing a guest? Add their name on a clipboard nailed up in the cart shed and enjoy. Looking for a cold brewski after the round? There’s a well-stocked fridge in the kitchen of the modest wood- framed clubhouse—help yourself, as long as you sign for that. But please, make sure you clean up afterward. “One of the things I like about it,” said past president Emily Day, “is that it’s really a microcosm of how a libertarian golf course environment would work. We don’t need a lot of rules. It’s each to their own. It operates on the honor system.” The golf course has been around since the 1920s and is an offspring of what once was known as The Blue Ridge Hunt, which focused on fox hunting going all the way back to the late 1800s. In 1915, Roland Mitchell, a New Jersey native, married Susan Page, who was born at the nearby Saratoga Farm in Clarke County. In time, Mitchell and his wife moved their family to the Glen, an estate V I R G I N I A G O L F E R | M AY / J U N E 2 0 1 8 abutting Saratoga. Around 1915, Mitch- ell, an avid golfer, persuaded the Blue Ridge Club to relocate to a portion of the Glen in the hopes that a golf course could be established. Susan later donated this land to the club in her husband’s memory. Today’s clubhouse stands on the portion of the Glen the Mitchells gifted in 1917. The club then leased property for a nine-hole golf course from the Meadowbrook estate just to the east of the clubhouse. Peter Mayo, a Richmond native and ardent golfer himself who lived nearby, provided funds for the course construction. By the middle 1920s, the clubhouse, a frigid spring-fed swimming pool, and two clay tennis courts were added. And in 1957, the land leased for the golf course was pur- chased and added to the club’s fold. According to Andrew Stifler, another past Millwood president, in the early days of the golf course, the maintenance for each of the nine fairways and greens was the responsibility of nine different vsga.org No starting times are needed for members of Millwood Country Club. Show up, sign off on a cart and hit the challenging nine-hole track in any order you want.