New Investment Wave Reshapes Golf and Tourism
By Lee Pace
Wherever Kelly Miller and Haresh Tharani look across the Sandhills’ business and golf landscapes, they see growth and opportunity.
The U.S. Open at Pinehurst in 2024 drew more than 225,000 people coming to town and, according to a USGA study, generated a $200 million economic impact.
That outlook has given Miller, Tharani and their circle emanating from the family of LPGA founding member Peggy Kirk Bell and husband Warren the confidence to make a significant investment in the Sandhills’ golf future. They announced July 10 they had acquired two 36-hole golf operations in Moore County — Whispering Pines Country Club and Foxfire Country Club.
“We see great opportunities in both properties,” Miller says. “Our goal is to make significant improvements on all four courses and get them on an upward trajectory.
“There has been very little new golf built in Moore County in the last 20 years. This is a chance to some polish some classic golf courses from outstanding designers and make them available to the public at a reasonable price.”
The village of Whispering Pines is located about five miles north of Pinehurst and Southern Pines, equidistant between Hwy 15-501 to the west and Hwy. 1 to the east. The facility opened in 1959 and has two courses designed by Ellis Maples, the son of Frank Maples, the longtime construction chief and course superintendent under Donald Ross at Pinehurst Country Club.
Foxfire, located about six miles southwest of the village of Pinehurst, opened in 1968 and has two courses designed by Gene Hamm, a prolific golf architect of the mid-1900s who is a member of the Carolinas Golf Hall of Fame.
“Mr. Bell had a regular group that included Andy Page, the head pro at Southern Pines, and Harvie Ward, who was at Foxfire at the time,” Miller says. “They had 12 to 16 guys who played at Pine Needles, Southern Pines, Foxfire and Whispering Pines every week. We had a great time. Over the years, Foxfire and Whispering Pines have had their challenges.“I have fond memories playing there and have had my eye on them for some time.”
The original Foxfire layout was the venue for the ACC Men’s Golf Championship in 1970, 1973 and 1975. Nine holes were added in 1972, and the facility became a 36-hole operation in 1981. Today they are known as the Red Fox and Gray Fox courses.
“The two deals were not connected, it’s just coincidence they have come to fruition at basically the same time,” Miller says. “But both are very important to us. First, we’re taking care of hotel properties that have been part of the Sandhills for many years and been in our family for many years. And second, we’re taking on four new courses with great lineage and great bones.
“The Sandhills and the state of North Carolina have a great future. These initiatives are our way of being an important part of what’s to come.”
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Lee Pace is a freelance golf writer who has written about Sandhills area golf for four decades and is the author of club histories about Pinehurst Resort & Country Club, Mid Pines, Pine Needles and Forest Creek.
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