Tom MacW
As of 1930 it seems like MacKenzie would have had a lot to do with NSW, but who knows? It seems to me like the course relative to his plan was "unfinished," for example it may not have contained all the bunkers in the original plan. Also, Lt-Col Bertram as secretary and Scotty Bissett as greenkeeper were responsible for getting the course built; did they follow his plans or ignore them? If the latter, they wasted 250-pounds Sterling on consultancy fees!
Russell didn't come along until the second half of 1931 and Apperly until Nov 1932. But MacKenzie's original plan as you must know has been lost, including the number and location of bunkers. The club history quotes club minutes stating that Russell's visit was "to assess the progress made with MacKenzie's routing and bunkering plans."
The original prospectus contained a 27-hole layout by James Herd Scott and Carnegie Clark (who worked with Dan Soutar), but apparently little or no progress was made, at which point MacK was brought in and by his account "made an entirely new course."
The Referee weekly said, "Dr MacKenzie laid out the original course plan. He made a feature of the fairways, none of which is really flat."
On the other hand, the history notes that MacK's routing plan for the stretch of holes 3-8 bear resemblance to Clark and Soutar's (jeez, this is convoluted!) plans for the stretch of holes 7-12.
So it seems 1930 aerial should count on the balance as showing MacKenzie, but that assumes Bertram and Bissett hew to MacK's plan -- and no idea whether the bunkering scheme shown represents the complete implementation of Mac's plan. I would assume it does not, but who can figure out anything substantive from this mess?!
But Tom to your larger point: he wrote about economy from the very start of his career! He felt the need to justify his design fee and part of that justification was construction costs. (Possibly maintenance too but I'm too lazy to look!) How can you imply he didn't come by reduced bunkers "honestly," that he sold out his principles to Mammon, when he argued so forcefully for "economy" and "finality" in design?
I don't necessarily disagree with your premise. It's interesting to think he would argue for economy, then in the Roaring Twenties bunker up, perhaps arguing they were appropriate (and therefore cheaper) to the site and / or that he could build bunkers better (= more cheaply) -- only to have the Depression come in and reconceive his definition of "economy." It certainly helps explain how his courses lack a sameness.
But:
1. Is the record complete? We might go back to his inland English work in the 1910s and find "minimal bunkering."
2. I can't find an instance where the man sold out his principles for money. One of the reasons he might have struggled with cash was because he felt strongly things had to be done a certain way, yes?
What about this passage from a 1927 Golf Illustrated piece MacKenzie penned:
On the whole, Australian golf courses are good. The various club committees have been impressed with the importance of visibility, but they seem so much obsessed with the idea of length that some of the courses are much too long. On most of them the fairways are too narrow, and at the Royal Sydney and Australian courses I advised them to convert over a hundred bunkers on each course into grassy hollows. As it was, they were of no interest to anyone; they simply made the game impossible for the old gentleman and cramped the young slashing player. On the other hand, there was very little strategy about the holes and very little real placing of the tee-shots was necessary.
That sounds like bunkering come by honestly.
Mark
PS Far be it from me to contradict published MacKenzie experts! Castletown has no record of A MacKenzie involvement; however two old newspaper articles say the course was"reconstructed entirely on modern principles" by MacKenzie in 1913-14. It also sounded, and sounds, like a fantastic site, with a drive created by MacKenzie over a chasm that might have been one of the two most-thrilling he ever designed. (According to the head pro, this drive, in MacKenzie's plan the 15th, became Ross's 17th.) One of the articles describes how Mac supervised the work via photos, which I find fascinating as a concept which helps explain how MacKenzie gave deep and continual consideration to the problem of ensuring his ideas were communicated, understood and implemented without requiring his physical presence.
PPS Has Neil asked for the Ohio State correspondence? I would love to see it, too!