Virginia Golfer Mar / Apr 2019 | Page 12

( atc ) Member Clubs Homeward Bound Lifelong friends and former teammates return to revitalize Falling River in central Virginia by CHRIS LANG 10 where we literally hit our first golf balls. We’ve been here 10 years now. “I think it’s really interesting. I don’t know if there’s another club in the country that’s like that. I just think it’s something that’s really cool.” Jamerson’s name is well known in Vir- ginia golf circles. A graduate of James Madison University, he made a major impact as both an amateur and profes- sional. He was the stroke-play medalist at the 1999 VSGA Amateur Championship and reached the title match a year later. He’s a three-time State Open of Virginia champion and the only player since 1984 to win the event both as a professional and as an amateur. He competed in the 2011 PGA Championship at Atlanta Athletic Club. Now 42 and the father of four children, Jamerson recognizes that his heavy play- ing days are behind him. He puts all of his energy into collaborating with Bass to improve the golf course and member expe- rience at Falling River, which is tucked into the countryside a few miles from down- town Appomattox. V I R G I N I A G O L F E R | M A R C H / A P R I L 2 0 1 9 Now and then: Faber Jameson (left) and Chip Bass today, and as high school teammates (Bass is middle front and Jameson is behind him in the hat). Bass began college at Hampden-Sydney with a career in law in mind but quickly reversed course. “I just realized through all that time that I really missed being on the golf course,” Bass said. He transferred to Virginia Tech and entered the school’s turfgrass program before beginning his career as the first assis- tant at London Downs in Forest. Bass and Jamerson briefly crossed paths profession- ally at Poplar Grove. Bass was in Atlanta in 2010 when Jamerson reached out, gauging his interest in coming back to central Vir- ginia to help revitalize Falling River. When Jamerson returned to Falling River, the golf course was in disarray. The fairways were sparse. The greens were not in great shape. The bones of a great golf course existed. Fred Findlay—who designed vsga.org T he thought of home can be a powerful draw. And for Chip Bass and Faber Jamerson, Appomattox’s Falling River Country Club is undoubtedly home. It’s the place the two lifelong friends swung a golf club for the first time. It’s where they worked in the cart barn as teenagers, trying to earn extra money. It’s where they posed for a trophy photo after helping their Appomattox County High School Raiders to a regional title in 1994. When opportunity arose for both men to return to their home course as profession- als in their respective fields, the draw was too strong to resist. Jamerson, a Class A PGA Professional, returned to Falling River in 2008 after a stint at Amherst’s Poplar Grove Golf Club. Two years later, Bass—a Class A GCSAA super- intendent—joined the team at Falling River. “Chip and I have been together for a long time,” Jamerson said. “We grew up here. We kind of went away from each other for a while. He got into the superintendent side of the business. I got into the PGA side of the business. But we’re back here together,