"Tom I think that at this point these fairways would have been cut with a horse drawn three gang mower."
Bradley:
Nevertheless, what I'm really wondering is if those fair number of melded together fairways were simple a function of the mechanics of those mowers at the time? I'm 64 now and I've been mowing fields and such since I was around 14 and I do remember those old mowers and how you had to get off and manually disengage the mowers if you were going into an unmowed area. It seems to me it was just easier in those days to have those frequent fairway "melds" just so you didn't have to do that back then.
Matt Shaeffer of Merion noticed that on old photos of the West course where there were these wide mown swaths between holes and even through some treelining. He figured it happened that way just so the guy mowing didn't have to keep getting off to manually disengage the mowers all the time.
I even remember the old bar-lever to engage and disengage those old mowers. It wasn't that easy to do frankly. Sometimes I had to actually prop myself up on something to get some leverage to push it in and out/back and forth. I think I even did some pretty energetic and probably angry kicking on it from time to time!
I seem to recall it was pretty much the same kind of thing for equipment like some of the old hay rakes and bailers we used to have on the farm.
Tom,
I think fairway and rough mowing schemes were less standardized then than they are now. Some clubs had one set of gangs to mow the whole playing field through the green at one height of cut. The rough outside of that cut was more or less knocked down with a sickle bar mower once or twice a year - the kind of mower that is used to mow hay fields.
I used to run a sickle bar mower on my grandfathers farm when I was a kid. That is one dangerous piece of machinery! There was three legged dog on that farm.
There were other clubs that ran more than one gang mower, with the second set adjusted higher to provide a differentiation between the rough and the fairway, not unlike the standards that we have today. These clubs would generally water the fairways. And I beginning to think that those fairways were generally seeded to finer textured grasses.
But I am speaking in very broad generalizations here. This was all constantly changing.
I don't think MacKenzie connected those fairways to save the operator from disengaging the gang mowers. I would guess that he actually had strategic reasons for doing so. He once said that "no one ever gets as much thrill from driving over a stretch of rough as they do a fearsome bunker." I actually think that he didn't care much for rough as a factor in the outcome of a match. And he detested searching for lost balls.
I am assuming that Alwoodley was not irrigated in the fairways, so the main cost in having large fairways was mowing. If it had been an inch or two higher, you would still have to mow it, albeit with 50% less frequency. His fairway mowing scheme actually makes a lot of sense. Augusta kept that scheme right up until recently.
I have some pictures of old clubs where the fairways are cut 60 yards wide, right to the tree lines. Those bunkers that are way out there in the rough used to be in the fairways. I think that the hickory clubs must have been more wild for trying to control a truly strait line, and they just needed wider playing fields back then.