RJ: #11 at Tobacco Road - man, that is a great looking hole!! Does it playa s good as it looks?
I think if that marvelous hazard goes around the other sides of the green it might be what I consider a Cape green - or if the green was a precarious shelf or plateau it might be that.
Most of the Capes of Macdonald/Raynor were shorter par-4s.
On old scorecards from the 1920s some were listed:
* 2nd at Castle Harbour
* 5th at Lido
* Morris County Country Club, the12th
* 5th at Ocean Links
* 8th at St Lois
* 10th at Yeamans Hall
I think the 16th green at TPC Sawgrass is a Cape-style green - most people think 18-TPC Sawgrass as a cape hole, including myself, until I got into the old articles and maps researching National.
In 1914 Macdonald and Henry Whigham (his Son in Law) published and article in the magazine of the day Golf Illustrated:
“CAPE”
by C. B. Macdonald and H. J. Whigham
The fourteenth hole at the National Golf Links is called the Cape Hole, because the green extends out into the sea with which it is surrounded upon by three sides. It is today [1914] one of the most individual holes in existence and there is probably not another like it anywhere. ................... One who has been accustomed to the ordinary hazard placed to penalize a slice can have no conception of the effect which this limitless expanse of water has; and especially so because it stands mercilessly guarding the shortest line to the hole. The ordinary echelon bunker asks no more than to be carried, but here, not only a good carry is demanded, but the most precise direction. The temptation to risk it is very great for the line to the line to the middle of the fairgreen at a distance of 210 yards, is but a shade to the left of this longest carry, and it is at this point in the fairgreen is but forty-seven yards in width, with a series of four large and traps to catch a pull, the risk is mandatory upon the long driver (G Bahto note: with hickory shafts and gutty ball long drivers of the time could only carry the ball about 180 yards at best). If the shot is successful, the player is left with a niblick pitch over a pebbly beach onto a flat green which from his position is one hundred feet in width. An over approach is disastrous, consequently a par four to this hole, which by land is but a little over 300 yards carry, is very satisfying".