Mr Kiss,
Clubs can cease to make history. Some clubs have hosted a single event 70-80 years ago to the exclusion of all other tournaments since that date, while other clubs continue to make history by demonstrating a pattern of their committment to golf through the ongoing hosting of tournaments.
Does one club live on its laurels forever, despite no ongoing contribution to golf in the last 80 years ?
USGA SR Amateur's, MID-amateurs and SENIOR Open competitions are recent additions to the tournament mix, and as such don't carry the same weight as the Walker Cup, an International USGA competition. Had they been, and had Bobby Jones won 6 straight Mid Amateurs, or Byron Nelson, Sam Snead or Ben Hogan won 3 or 4 Senior Opens, they may have been looked at in a different light, and perhaps the gap between those tournaments would be substantially narrowed.
With respect to your list, is it the venue or the competition that determines "tournament points" ?
If it is the competition, then the list of clubs is irrelevant.
Awarding "tournament history" points, deliberately biases the ratings, since a new course can't compete for a ranking on an equal footing. It is a built in cushion, or fudge factor favoring classic golf courses, especially those with a historical connection to the USGA. Now, I'm not saying I agree or disagree with that, I'm just telling you what I see.
"Tournament History" also presents a bias against southern courses, since it's difficult if not impossible to host a US Open in June, or other tournaments typically scheduled in the summertime, in the south, hence they can't compete on an equal footing for certain events = "tournament Points"
I am only advocating that the magazines that pubish these rankings/ratings disclose their methodology.
What do they have to hide ?