Today is Monday, May 4, 2026. You’re reading The Charlotte Ledger, an e-newsletter with local business-y news and insights for Charlotte, N.C.

Good morning! It’s Tony. With the big golf tournament in town this week, Quail Hollow Club will be in the news. But it hasn’t always been a nationally known course. Over dinner on Friday night, writer Maggie Fipps caught up with an 89-year-old charter member of Quail Hollow to talk about its early days. He said it started out of frustration with being unable to get tee times at Charlotte Country Club — and plenty of other stories you probably haven’t heard. We’ve also got news of JetBlue returning to CLT after a two-year hiatus, a new argument against data centers and a fun Lawrence Toppman review of what happens at Discovery Place when they ban the kids, open the bar and break out the beer goggles. Enjoy!

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A charter member from 1960, David Barnhardt, reminisces about the club when it was just Jeep trails and dreams

Charter Quail Hollow Club member David Barnhardt and Arnold Palmer at Quail Hollow in May 1998. (Photo courtesy of David Barnhardt)

by Maggie Fipps

You may not recognize David Barnhardt at first glance — realtor, investor, son of William Barnhardt, a prominent Charlotte textile executive. But one thing is clear: He loves golf.

If you see him around The Sharon at SouthPark, where he lives, you might find him walking with an old chipper instead of a cane, with a sweater and polo to match. His hat reads “Quail Hollow, 1960.” 

For Barnhardt, the hat is not just a souvenir. That year, he signed on as a charter member of the club. It cost him only $1,500, still a good bit of cash for a 24-year-old freshly out of N.C. State. Today, a membership to Quail Hollow would cost 100 times that much. 

This week at the Truist Championship, the storied course will be teeming with carts and caddies, spectators and story lines. The national golf spotlight will be on Charlotte, with some of the best golfers in the world competing for a piece of $20M in prize money.

But it wasn’t always that way.

Barnhardt remembers riding a Jeep around the yet-undeveloped land, pointing out the spot where the famous lake would be — the one that is now a fixture on the course’s final holes, which have come to be known as the “Green Mile.” 

Almost 70 years ago, Quail Hollow was not the elite, upper echelon club that people think of today, he says. It was more of the upstart in town — born out of frustration with tight tee times at Charlotte Country Club, where members had to call days in advance just to get on the course on a Saturday. When founder James J. Harris — a business and civic leader whose family owned land in the SouthPark area — initially reached out to them to ask if they wanted to merge memberships, they declined. 

“They were kind of snobby,” Barnhardt said. “I can say that because I was a member out there, too. That was an old-time club, and they didn’t want anything to do with Mr. Harris and Quail Hollow and anything new.”

Harris, whose wife’s father was N.C. Gov. Cameron Morrison, convened Charlotte business leaders in 1959 to start the new club. It opened in 1961. Harris’ son, developer Johnny Harris, is now the club’s longtime president. [This story was corrected on May 4 to accurately reflect James J. Harris’ relationship to former Gov. Cameron Morrison.]

Although today’s Quail Hollow Club is surrounded by some of Charlotte’s priciest homes and is regarded as an elite place, Barnhardt remembers it as a “family club.” 

A copy of the charter member certificate David Barnhardt (inset) received upon joining the club in July 1960. (Courtesy of David Barnhardt)

“There were really special people, but we really didn’t go for that fame and stuff,” Barnhardt said. “You could be sitting next to a guy who owned a thousand homes or acres, didn’t matter.” 

Quail Hollow was much more relaxed, so much so that Barnhardt and his buddies played a game called “cross-country” on Saturday afternoons.

“They’d get on the first tee, and then somebody would call hole number five, so you would have to go through the woods,” Barnhardt said. “When you get to number five, then somebody would say ’18,’ and it might take you eight or 10 strokes to get there.”

For him, entering the Barnhardt business didn’t just mean textiles. It also meant golf. His father, William, was the second president of Quail Hollow and helped raise the money for the clubhouse, and in David’s new sales job, he needed to connect with customers.

“I wanted to be able to play golf with somebody that shot in the 70s, a good golfer, and I wanted to be able to play golf with somebody that played 100,” Barnhardt said. “And I shot 85 for 25 years.”

Over his 37-year membership, he played with customers and coworkers, walking the course with other Quail Hollow members like Bill Williamson, the only other charter member still living. Another Bill he remembers playing with was a fellow Charlottean, the Rev. Billy Graham. In addition to being one of the world’s most famous preachers, Graham was also an avid golfer who played with U.S. presidents and appreciated the sport for the quiet reflection it offered.

On one hole, Barnhardt recalls, Graham had gotten himself stuck in a small patch of grass between the lake and a stand of trees — what looked to be an impossible upward shot. But the talented preacher was also a talented golfer, and he landed the ball right on the green.

“My dad said, ‘I believe Billy called in a little extra help on that shot,’” Barnhardt said, a twinkle in his eyes. 

What started as 90 charter members became 330, and Quail Hollow boomed into a massive success, in part because the club kept investing in updates. Golf legend Arnold Palmer redesigned greens and bunkers in the 1980s to make the course more demanding. The course was redesigned again in 1997, and club leaders sought to land national tournaments. It hosted the PGA Tour’s Kemper Open from 1969 to 1979, then the Wachovia Championship in 2003 and has since hosted some of golf’s most prestigious events, including two PGA Championships. [This story was corrected on May 4 to accurately identify the first PGA tournament played at Quail Hollow, the Kemper Open in the 1960s and 1970s.]

Of course, the upgrades that made those successes possible came with their own challenges for members like Barnhardt. He remembers receiving an assessment in the mail requesting a $10,000 check for improvements to the club.

Conveniently, Barndardt retired soon after and ended his membership to travel. “I didn’t have to tell [Johnny] I didn’t like his damn assessments.”

Much of the course Barnhardt tooled around on with his buddies is gone, renovated and resculpted. The change mirrors the ever-evolving growth in the city of Charlotte, which Barnhardt, 89, has called home for his whole life. Today, fitness studios replace farm land, and apartments replace acres of countryside. 

But as Barnhardt looks back, he says change is a good thing. 

“A lot of people complain about it, but I think it’s wonderful,” Barnhardt said. “It’s very dynamic.”

And as for what his dad would think?

“He would love it,” Barnhardt said. “He would be real proud of what Johnny Harris is doing out there [with] the tournament. He would be real proud of Charlotte.”

Maggie Fipps is a freelance writer. Reach her at [email protected].

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Today's Charlotte Ledger is sponsored by Carnegie Private Wealth. At Carnegie Private Wealth, we bring clarity to complexity. Through thoughtful planning and personal attention, we help you pursue opportunities and reclaim time for what matters most.

After Spirit’s collapse, JetBlue announces its return to CLT after pulling out in 2024; 3 flights a day to Fort Lauderdale

JetBlue will return to Charlotte in July after a two-year absence. (Photo: Shutterstock)

With Spirit Airlines halting all its flights and liquidating – including the eight to 10 flights a day from Charlotte – JetBlue says it will help to fill some of the void by adding three daily flights from CLT.

JetBlue’s announcement Saturday came just hours after Spirit Airlines said it was shutting down nationally, effective immediately. It marks a return to CLT for JetBlue, which pulled out of Charlotte in 2024 after 18 years.

JetBlue will fly three nonstops a day between Fort Lauderdale and Charlotte, starting July 9. JetBlue’s flights in July start at $241 round-trip. American, which has five flights a day to Fort Lauderdale from Charlotte, was listing flights Sunday at $374 round-trip for the same dates.

Spirit flew two or three flights a day between Charlotte and Fort Lauderdale. As recently as last year, it flew to 16 destinations from Charlotte, but not all of them daily. Charlotte’s airport said Spirit accounted for just 1% of the airport’s operations.

JetBlue also announced other flights from Fort Lauderdale, which was a Spirit stronghold, including to international destinations such as Colombia.

High fuel costs have been bedeviling airlines. Spirit was in bankruptcy protection when the Iran conflict began in February and was unable to reach a deal with the federal government for a bailout. —Tony Mecia

Related Ledger article:

New talking point emerges in opposition to data centers: the drought

As the Charlotte City Council seems headed toward considering a moratorium on allowing data centers, some council members are enlisting the drought as a reason to have concerns.

Data centers, which developers are proposing throughout the Charlotte region and the country, can use a lot of water. To cool equipment, medium-sized data centers can consume several hundred thousand gallons of water a day, or the equivalent of about 1,000 residential customers a year, and large ones can consume more than that.

Some council members are starting to link those two issues.

“While families across Charlotte are being asked to cut back, we are currently allowing data centers by right without the level of scrutiny this moment demands,” council member Dimple Ajmera wrote Friday in a Substack post. “These facilities place significant demands on our water supply, energy grid and land use systems.”

Last week, Ajmera pushed for a public hearing on data centers next month, which could have been the first step toward a moratorium on data centers in Charlotte. But a majority of her colleagues voted against that move and instead plan to discuss data centers at a meeting next week.

At last week’s meeting, council member Kimberly Owens said she needed more information on data centers before moving ahead with steps toward a moratorium and that she worried some people are “using data centers as a means to try to shut down AI.” But she added: “We need to be good stewards of our resources, particularly our water, while we're in the middle of a drought.

In the past, council members generally have not raised concerns about water availability when approving new developments. Most welcome the construction of new housing, which they say is needed to accommodate Charlotte’s growing population and prevent increases in housing prices, and they’ve been enthusiastic about successfully recruiting new businesses.

Charlotte Water’s restrictions are falling mostly on residential users, who are being asked to cut back on watering lawns and washing cars at home.

There have been no restrictions aimed at commercial businesses that use a lot of water, such as car washes, power plants, manufacturing facilities, non-residential swimming pools and golf courses.

If the drought worsens, though, further restrictions could be on the way.

At a Friday media availability to discuss the drought, Charlotte Water officials cautioned that they were there only to discuss the drought — not data centers. –Tony Mecia

🎭 TOPPMAN ON THE ARTS

Local arts criticism — from touring Broadway shows to community theater and museum exhibits — from longtime critic Lawrence Toppman

Once a month, Discovery Place goes kid-free and lets adults explore science … with drinks.

At Discovery Place’s monthly “Science on the Rocks,” adults swap kids for cocktails. Lawrence Toppman finds a surprisingly relaxed, playful night where hands-on exhibits, themed drinks and a diverse crowd make the museum feel entirely different after dark.

Life imitates The Ledger’s April Fools edition: South End micro-apartments

Extraordinary Land Co. … last month filed plans in conjunction with Crescent Communities for Novel Troglodyte, a 325-unit LEED-certified luxury micro-apartment complex with amenities that include a lighted putting green, LED mood lighting and a combination taproom/health club with tanning beds. … The micro-apartments have shared living space and separate bedroom units inspired by Japanese capsule hotels.

Panorama Holdings has secured financing for Project J, an 84-unit “microunit” project planned for 1722 S. Tryon St. in South End. … Project J will be a six-story development with 84 apartments that average 363 sq. ft. The site Panorama owns is tiny — less than half an acre. All units will be furnished with Ori robotic furniture systems, which are designed to maximize space efficiency. Property amenities will include a first-floor lounge, an outdoor patio with a kitchen and a grill, a sixth-floor balcony patio, indoor bike storage and food locker services.

Share The Charlotte Ledger with a friend for a chance to win some merch!

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You might be interested in these Charlotte events

Events submitted by readers to The Ledger’s events board:

FRIDAY: The Color Purple,” 8-10:30 p.m., at Theatre Charlotte, 501 Queens Road. Join Theatre Charlotte for an unforgettable journey of enduring love and triumph over adversity. Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel comes to life with a joyous score featuring jazz, ragtime, gospel and blues. Performances take place May 8-24. $20-$34/ticket.

SATURDAY: Kids Night Out: Music and Art,” 5:30-8:30 p.m., at Arts+ Community Campus, 2304 The Plaza. Come bring your kids for a fun night in while you take a break with a night off! Children will enjoy an evening of play and creation as they sing, dance and make beautiful artworks. $50.

MAY 12: MHS Evening Program: ‘Charles Cornwallis, Kings Mountain & the Hornet’s Nest,’” 6:30-8 p.m., at Trinity Presbyterian Church Fellowship Hall, 3115 Providence Rd. Join the Mecklenburg Historical Society and hear from author Andrew Waters as he discusses how the dangers Charles Cornwallis faced in Charlotte contributed to British major Patrick Ferguson’s defeat at the Battle of Kings Mountain, and how these intertwined disasters ruined England’s strategy to reconquer the American South. Refreshments will be provided. Free, but donations are encouraged.

MAY 18: A Conversation with Chef Sam Hart,” 5:30-7 p.m., at ImaginOn: The Joe and Joan Martin Center, 300 E. 7th St. Join the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library Foundation for an evening at the intersection of culinary arts and library advocacy. In a moderated conversation, the city’s first Michelin-starred chef, Sam Hart, will share how storytelling shapes every course they create and why they’re donating a curated collection of culinary books to the new Main Library at Charlotte Mecklenburg Library. $15/ticket.

In brief

  • Officials push for delay on Atrium merger: State and local leaders are calling for a delay ahead of a Monday meeting on a proposed deal that would put Raleigh-based WakeMed under Atrium Health’s control, citing concerns about transparency, costs and reduced local oversight. (N.C. Health News)

  • CMS board discusses budget, personnel matters: At a rare Saturday budget workshop, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools board members went into a lengthy closed session over unspecified personnel matters, just days after an unusual 8–1 vote rejecting the superintendent’s $2.1B budget. The board will hold additional budget meetings this week. (WFAE)

  • Small Charlotte AI startup closes: The founder and CEO of Charlotte-based startup Zinnia, which uses artificial intelligence to help companies improve sales, said on LinkedIn that she is shutting the company down after losing access to its primary data source, and that AI consulting has been more lucrative than AI software. “Companies don’t need more AI tools right now. They need help understanding how to actually use AI,” she wrote. (Lauren Goodell on LinkedIn)

  • Hoping to sell CLT Social Club: The founder of CLT Social Club, which organizes social gatherings for people to make friends, said on LinkedIn that she is looking to sell the business. She says CLT Social Club is on track to take in $30,000 in revenue this year and hopes to sell for about “3x annual average.” The Ledger profiled the organization in 2023. (Katey Shehan on LinkedIn)

  • Spider lily time: Landsford Canal State Park, which says it has the world’s largest population of Rocky Shoals Spider Lilies, says it is approaching peak viewing season. “It’s looking pretty out there as hundreds of white blossoms have now appeared,” the park said on its website last week. “Beat the crowds by coming to see us now, or get ready to see peak bloom near the middle or end of May!” It’s 45 minutes south of Charlotte.

  • When Cinco de Mayo falls on Taco Tuesday: Charlotte on the Cheap has a round-up of Cinco de Mayo deals, from $5 margaritas to 50 cent tacos.

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