Tom MacWood,
While I applaud you efforts at research, you are so naive in this area that it's incredible. You think that every change at every golf course is just sitting in a file, complete with committee and board minutes, financial records, aerial and ground level photos, and the architect's diary. That's not the way it is. ~~You are preaching to the choir. How many golf courses have you researched?
I know of so many changes, substantive changes, to certain golf courses that are completely undocumented. And, these changes happened in the last two, five, ten twenty and forty years. How do you pretend to be able to magically uncover undocumented changes ? You can research until the cows come home and you won't find an iota of evidence regarding these changes. And absent that information, how can you make the iron clad statement of what the original architects work was and wasn't ? Or, what the club's high water mark was ?~~ It is not necessary to document every single change and who is responsible for every single change to find the architectural high point. GCGC’s high point was somewhere between 1932 and 1950. Do you disagree with this? Have you documented all the changes from 1900 to the present?
Just look at your debate relative to Aronimink.~~The architectural history of Aronomink is not the same as Hollywood which is not the same as GCGC. Each course has a different history. And what Rees did to Hollwood is not the same as what Prichard did at Aronimink. They are seperate cases and seperate issues.
Your positions conflict with one another.
On one hand you don't want original works touched, and you want any changes to those courses plowed under with purist restoration your goal.~~Your over simplistic view of these things is getting annoying. Is GCGC of 1935 the original untouched work? Is Pebble Beach of 1928 the original untouched work. Is Hollywood of 1918 the original untouched work? Is Merion of 1950 the original untouched work?
And then, you say it's okay to alter a design. You say that clubs should strive for their high water mark.~~Yes. There are a limited number of historic designs that should preserved and protected. Each course got to their historic high point in different ways...some were born that way others were altered into it. Because Hollywood and GCGC were altered into it over fifty years ago, does that mean we should allow Rees Jones or Tom Doak redesign them today?
But there are some difficult questions that you CAN"T ANSWER.
1 Who makes that call at each club ?~~ Obviously we are only talking about a relatively few historically important designs. IMO it should be determined by historians.
2 Why do you feel that a course's high water mark is solely
in the past, why can't it be in the courses future ?~~It could be, but historically important designs should be preserved and protected .
3 And, if it's in their future, then YOU open the door to
alterations and disfigurations, don't you ?~~You lost me.
It can't be okay for Travis to modify Emmett's work, but not okay for Rees to modify Travis's work.~~Travis altered what would be considered by any standard an average golf course (and that might be giving it the benefit of the doubt). Rees altered a golf course that was considered a masterpiece in its day….four different experts claimed it was the second best course in America.
However, if you're saying that the alteration of a golf course is okay if the golf course is improved, then it counters your earlier desire to have no course touched, and every modified course returned to its original form.~~Its not that difficult Pat, but you still need to let your brain work a little….I know you like everything ultra simple, but unfortunately it takes a little brain work, not much mind you.
And, if it's okay to alter a golf course in the name of improvement, then you open the flood gates for modifications or disfigurements, BECAUSE EVERY CLUB MAKING MODIFICATIONS THINKS IT'S IMPROVING THE GOLF COURSE.~~Right on!