CEDARS COUNTRY CLUB
🇺🇸 Chatham, VA, USA
Designed by Gene Hamm
Cedars Country Club sits in Chatham, a small town in Pittsylvania County in south-central Virginia, roughly halfway between Danville and Lynchburg. The course was designed by Gene Hamm, a regional architect active primarily in Virginia and the Carolinas during the latter decades of the twentieth century. Hamm's work typically emphasizes playability for a range of skill levels while working within the natural topography of Piedmont landscapes, characterized by rolling terrain, mature hardwoods, and occasional elevation changes.
The routing at Cedars likely takes advantage of the area's gentle hills and wooded corridors, common features in this part of Virginia where courses are often carved from former farmland or estate properties. The name suggests the presence of cedar trees, which are native to the region and often frame fairways and define playing corridors. Hamm's designs from this era generally feature traditional parkland layouts with strategic bunkering and greens that reward accurate approach play without excessive length demands.
Cedars Country Club serves as a community gathering place in Chatham, typical of small-town country clubs in Virginia that blend golf with social and family activities. The club provides a local venue for recreational play, member events, and casual competition, reflecting the role such facilities play in rural and semi-rural communities across the mid-Atlantic. The course offers a straightforward test of golf suited to its membership base and the rolling character of the Virginia Piedmont.
FAQ
Ratings, design, and course details pulled from Course Vaults.
Cedars Country was designed by Gene Hamm.
Yes. Cedars Country at Cedars Country Club is listed as welcoming public or guest play on Course Vaults.
Par at Cedars Country is 36.
Cedars Country plays 3,009 yards from the back tees on Course Vaults.
The slope rating at Cedars Country is 120.
Cedars Country is a 9-hole course.