Tom MacWood:
One of the problems with your five part "Arts and Crafts Movement" article is you pretty much fail to make a connection between Willie Park jr, the early golf architectural influences on him and Horace Hutchinson. Did Hutchinson influence Park jr's early ideas on golf architecture? If they did why don't you point out how, where and why? Even the timing of Park Jr and Hutchinson's careers don't really match!
For some reason you just assume that Willie Park jr's early work or his early ideas on golf architecture were what you refer to as "Victorian". Rich is right, why would you assume that? And if you do, then prove it! What do you know of his early ideas and the early influences on him?
What we do know is Willie Park jr was from the linksland, and as so many have described before the primary architectural influence on those early Scottish architects such as the Parks was the linksland courses themselves with their largely pre-architecture naturalness and randomness, and not "Victorianism", Horace Hutchinson or the English Arts and Crafts movement. Read Cornish and Whitten's Chapter 2 again in "The Architects of Golf". In my opinion, and seemingly in the opinion of most interested in this kind of thing, they chronicle the evolution, histories and influences on these people a whole lot better than you have with your completely forced insertion of this massive influence from an arts and crafts movement which is scarely, if ever, even mentioned in all the histories and evolutions of this early era, as well as the later era of the "Golden Age of Architecture". Your A&C movement influence of GCA, to me, is simply a classic example of an attempt at revisionist history in architecture, and in our opinion it just doesn't fly---not even close. It's just not supportable by facts, and frankly not even supportable by what you included in your own article.
Again, even in your five part article on the "Arts and Crafts Movement" you don't even make a connection between Park Jr and Hutchinson (or the A&C Movement) you simply seem to assume it and gloss right over or past it.
I think we can now understand why---because the connection and influence just didn't and doesn't really exist! It's not exactly a matter of people back then being aware of something like the A&C Movement, I'm sure we can be fairly certain many of those people back then were "aware" of a lot of things that didn't have a major influence on their golf architecture.
Your articles truly are massively researched with all kinds of extraneous information like who the headmaster of the school Hutchinson went to school was, what he believed in and his connection in some way to perhaps the ideas of Rushkin or Morris (A&C Movement). But that kind of attempt to massively connect everything and anything to me is like the classic "conspiracy theorist" who often attempts to prove that if anyone ever even met someone else they must have been massively influenced by him.
To me this is of no real difference from the "stretch" you either were or still are trying to make with the manner of George Crump's death and some connection to the club's glorification of Crump at the expense of Harry Colt's attribution by the club or others to the architecture of PVGC.
I know that club really well, the architecture, then and now, and plenty of members for years, and what they feel about PVGC, Crump and Colt. I feel confident that from the teens through to today if any of them read some of your opinions on the place and what they feel about things they really would wonder where this guy is coming up with this stuff.
You most certainly have a right to your opinions but in my opinion, and apparently in the opinion of others, some of yours are massively off-base and really unsupportable. But I'm sure that's no reason to you that you shouldn't continue to hold them! And the reason you generally seem to give most everyone for the accuracy of your assumptions and conclusions is only that you feel you are an 'expert reseacher/writer who's been doing this a long time'! That may be so but I'll always prefer to judge the accuracy of what you write and not just assume you're accurate because you keep saying you are!