Pat
Which theory are you referring to?
Are Bernard Darwin, Herbert Warren Wind, Fred Hawtree and Ron Whitten out of line when they include their judgments on Victorian architecture?
“And, I maintain that you can't compare and/or equate static mediums to interactive mediums. They have entirely different purposes, on entirely different mediums.”
Says who? Maybe you can’t…be others can and do.
“Tom, are you now saying that the Victorian Age, for golf course architecture is not from 1837 to 1901, but from 1890 to 1900 ?”
Yes, that is what I’m saying (1880 to 1900). The popularity of the game didn’t take off until around 1880.
The Dark Ages or Middle ages were aprox. 500 to 1100 AD. The Victorian period was not the Dark Ages.
The "Dark Ages" of golf design (aka Victorian era of golf design) was from about 1880 to 1900. That late Victorian period was blessed with great literature -- Dickens, Kipling, Conan Doyle, Wells, Carlyle, Ruskin, Arnold, Huxley, Tennyson, Morris, Stevenson, Wilde and Pater. A number of these guys were associated with the Aesthetic movement, the Pre-Raphaelites and/or the A&C Movement.
Conan Doyle and Wells were avid golfers. Kipling attended the same school as Hutchinson at Westward Ho!...but I’m sure if he played the game.
TE
It doesn’t appear to me you’ve read it very carefully. You continue to claim the essay claims the A&C was the primary influence upon the golden age. The essay says that Hutchinson was the primary influence. He was the first and most powerful voice recommending the natural links should be emulated as much as possible inland.
The essay also explains the prevailing aesthetic philosophy in Britain was based upon the ideas of Pugin, Ruskin and Morris. And that many of the golf architects of that time were spreading a similar message. And becasue of that IMO golf architecture should be included within the A&C movement.