3 24 16 buzz on biz march april 64 pages

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MARCH 24—APRIL 20, 2016 • THE CSRA’S MONTHLY BUSINESS MAGAZINE

Fire destroyed 141 businesses 100 years ago Devastation led to new growth on Broad Street

By Gary Kauffman One hundred years ago, on March 22, 1916, a fire swept through part of Augusta’s business district, resulting in the loss of 141 businesses – about a fourth of the city’s businesses at that time. About 600 families, a total of about 3,000 people, were left homeless and 1,000 jobs were lost. Fortunately, no lives were lost in the blaze. Yet devastating as the fire was, there was a bit of serendipity in it. In the aftermath Augusta flourished and shaped today’s downtown and the Summerville district. “If you can say anything fortunate came out of a fire like that, it’s that the architectural taste of the period was very good,” said Erick Montgomery, executive director of Historic Augusta, who has lectured on the fire. “There was a building boom after that.” Montgomery said that the 1915 city directory listed six architectural firms. Just two years later, after the fire, the 1917 directory showed 11 architectural firms. Although he doesn’t have a firm count, he said the number of construction companies and related businesses like plumbers, elec-

Buildings on Augusta’s Broad Street in full blaze on March 22, 1916. Photo courtesy Historic Augusta, Inc.

tricians and masons, also grew. Included in that new construction were buildings now considered jewels of the city, like the Imperial Theatre. Montgomery said the Summerville area between 15th

Street and Heard Avenue was already growing, but boomed after the fire as people who lost homes in the blaze decided See GREAT FIRE OF 1916, page 4

Mount Vintage course sings again After tough years, 27-hole course makes a comeback

By Susan O’Keefe There’s no Amen Corner but there could easily be a Hallelujah chorus bouncing off a quiet golf course set in the rolling hills of South Carolina just a few miles from Augusta. Halfway between Edgefield and North Augusta sits Mount Vintage Plantation Golf Course and the facility is back in the swing this spring after a few years of trying times. The resounding song of celebration comes as the course is under new management and eager to tout its beautiful 27 holes. Since November 2015, Orlando-based Integrity Golf Company has been managing the facility. Garland Smith, Director of Tournaments at Mount Vintage, is eager to see the course rise to its full potential. When

The fifth green looking toward the sixth hole on the Chester Course of Mount Vintage Plantation Golf Course near North Augusta. Photo by Gary Kauffman

Mount Vintage first opened more than a decade ago, it hosted an LPGA Tour event. In 2008 it debuted another nine holes, making it a marketable place for tournaments as

well as individuals. “That’s the nice thing about having 27 holes,” Smith said. “We can accommodate our members but still host outside groups,

so it’s a great place to have an outing,” Bouncing back from adversity But things weren’t always rosy for Mount Vintage. In February 2014 it closed because of financial reasons, but opened again a few months later. In February 2015 KemperSports began managing the course before Integrity took over in November. Things are already looking up with a number of tournaments scheduled. “We have a few church group outings,” Smith said. “We’re also hosting a CSRA high school tournament, and we’re working on several corporate outings.” Mount Vintage’s three nine-hole courses – Chester, Vintage and Independent – offer plenty of challenges for golfers with sharp doglegs, rolling hills and water. And while it isn’t named the Amen Corner, the fifth and sixth holes on the Chester course bring to mind the course across the river with its layout and stone bridge. The par 3 sixth features a shot across the water with bunkers in front and back that is reminiscent of Augusta National’s 12th hole. Some Mount Vintage golfers point to See MOUNT VINTAGE, page 2


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