Greater Williamsburg, VA, offers families a variety of ways to tee-off a great vacation
Located less than a day's drive from most of the Northeast, the region is one of the world's top 25 golf destinations! Save your long-drive for the fairway so you can enjoy more quality family time together:
- Nationally-Recognized Play: Named to “America’s 100 Greatest Public Courses” for 2011-2012, Golden Horseshoe Gold Course in Colonial Williamsburg makes for a great family play day!
- Junior Golf Camps: While Mom and Dad hit the links, budding young golfers can be introduced to the game and begin mastering techniques that will last a lifetime on Colonial Williamsburg and Jamestown courses, including stance fundamentals and key strokes.
- The 19th Hole: Wind down at Kingsmill Resort’s Bray Bistro, featuring mouth-watering southern cuisine, and Eagles restaurant, utilizing exclusive beechwood-smoked cooking overlooking the James River and River Course.
The “Stay-and-Play” Getaway package at Kingsmill Resort offers 3-days/2-nights for a family of four from $499, including breakfast daily and family recreational activities at the Marina.
Greater Williamsburg will provide transportation assistance, accommodations, meals, and itinerary development for your visit. For more information on press trip opportunities, please contact me directly at
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. I will also give you a follow up call about this information.
Grab your clubs and prepare to tee off this summer by visiting
www.visitwilliamsburg.com .
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DULLES, Va. - 1757 Golf Club, which unveiled 10 holes to rave reviews last May, will open its complete, 18-hole championship course to the public on Thursday, May 6, 2010.
Designed by David Heatwole, formerly with Jack Nicklaus' design company, the 6,623-yard, 18-hole, par-70 gem places premiums on shot-making and using every club in golfers' bags for fair challenges to all handicappers.
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Pete Dye arrived on the campus of Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida fresh off a stint with the 82nd Airborne Infantry of the United States Army in World War II. Soon after his arrival at Rollins, where he served as captain of the men's golf team, he met Alice O'Neal who would become his bride.
The young men who now sport the burnt orange and chicago maroon of Virginia Tech probably wouldn't be playing on such a world-class course if it weren't for the relationship Pete had with Alice, who encouraged him to pursue his passion in golf course design.
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