Tom - thanks; a really good post.
Not exactly connected to the Haskell question, but just in case it was of an interest to Phil B or others, here's an excerpt from a NY Times article from 1910. The article suggests that the period of lengthening courses has passed, and notes that CB Macdonald’s “ideal course, near Shinnecock Hills” is a “trifle over 6,000 yards” Then it quotes Macdonald extensively:
"The advent of the lively ball is not the only change in modern conditions which needs to be considered. One other factor, a least equally important, is the improvement in the art of greens-keeping, which makes a good lie on the fairway a matter of course. The result is that brassie shots are few and far between. The lies are so good that the second shot really called for is another slog with the driver. Now the player’s prowess in this direction is surely sufficiently tested when he plays fifteen or sixteen full shots from the tee in the course of a round without it being necessary to call upon him to repeat the same stroke through the green. The par-five hole of an earlier day, by demanding a full wooden shot for the second from lies that were often indifferent, tested the real brassie stroke, but this has almost disappeared, and the most important test of the wooden club shot through the green is the par four hole (….) It is the difficult par four holes, especially those which are at the same time bogie 5s, which do most to make the would-be champions show the golf that is in them”
There's some more there; I can't cut-and-paste from the pdf, but if anyone's interested let me know and I'll email it when I get a chance.
Peter