Adam:
My thoughts on the GCA of Wilson?
Well, first of all I'm definitely not going to get into my thoughts on his courses in the context of penal or even strategic or penal vs strategic for the simple reason that discussions like that on this website can never seem to get off the definitional dime about what those terms mean to anyone, at least in degree.
But if one can generalize about Wilson and his career and style that began to come on-stream in the early to mid 1950s I would say one could pretty much categorize it or generalize about it as bigger in every way than anything that had come before it, in scale, distance (of tees, entire holes, greens, bunkers).
I think that was all driven by such factors as the necessity of almost instant inventiveness of things to do with the war needs and it was happening everywhere around us in the early fifties and on.
The enormous resources in not just manpower and machinery but the fast tracked inventiveness and production of the massive war effort that had been turned outward during the war was now being turning inward right into our country and its rejuvenating needs and desires. Everything was affected and it showed including in golf and golf construction and architecture.
Much more sophisticated construction machinery probably developed because of the war effort or its inventiveness was much larger and more efficient in creating entire holes and massive earthmoving from tee to greens which never much took place in golf architecture previously, at least nowhere near that extent.
They were moving way more earth even in flat Florida not because they had to but because they could so much more easily than ever before. That worked right into such things as more man-made water hazards and ponds and lakes that played right into much greater irrigation availablity and use that all played right into much easier real estate sales marketing.
Golf equipment was changing dramatically and it showed in the way particularly good golfers were playing the game. The aerial game was becoming the standard for the first time. Irrigation equipment was quickly improving and being used far more expansively and America was getting green (in color that is; certainly not in conservation as that word is being used today. Back then it was pretty much the polar opposite of resource conservation of any kind). Agronomy methods were changing quickly etc. The cart was getting born in golf and that added to size and scale and resource use.
Basically Americans were home and they were on the road bigtime with the top down with ultra cheap gas and big cars for the first time and things were just getting bigger and with more of everything.
Dick Wilson's architectural style showed this but so did RTJ's. They were basically the two big boys of golf course architecture in America then. They were the stars and they seemed to be the ones far more in demand by the big hitter clients, at least the ones my farther knew, than all the other architects who were coming into the business then---including most all that had been former foremen in the past.
I think Wilson's 1950s courses, at least some of them, are actually better or more interesting than his later stuff, at least for my taste. And that may've had something to do with his physical condition or it just may've had to do with the fact that his earlier stuff was when he was most creative or before he got too busy or drunk and sort of into some standard product line as many very busy architects seem to for probably obvious reasons.
I personally saw Meadowbrook come into being construction-wise as I did Pine Tree about ten years later. There are some elements of Meadowbrook I find just fascinating like the size of some of those original greens---they were just enormous and strategically that was demanding in and of itself.
Wilson closed down on the approaches too compared to the way things had been, not entirely but in some very interesting ways such as not just narrower middles but a couple narrow entries that may've been more aesthetic stylizing than actually functional in play.
For Pine Tree, I do remember the take on it by my father (who was one of the founders) and his buddies. The course was really long and hard, really long tees, holes, real aerial demanding second shots etc. They loved it, they were proud of its difficulty and demands because that's what they wanted. The bunkers were large scale and broadly splayed out and the greens were ultra multi-forms with all kinds of interesting entry aerial shot values and angles.
I hate to say this, because I don't like it (and I think it's demeaning to much of the rest of the world and particularly our wartime Allies both actually and figuratively) but because I grew up in it I will say it; when Wilson became big in architecture after the war this country was home, Americans basically felt THEY had just won a world war themselves, they were now much richer with their enormous resource and industrial and finance engines turned to peacetime production and they were about to take their act on the road internationally in all kinds of ways (not the least reason being George Marshall's "Plan" that was an incredibly effective market maker abroad for America).
One of the real historic or cultural ironies to me of the era of the fifties is it was also known by the term "The age of the Organization Man" and it was pretty conservative in many ways like our national politics. Maybe that was another result or vestibe of the indocrinating mentality of the war or military years, but it was definitely a time of incredible production and size and the realm of the possible for America; but even that "Organization Man" culture came crashing down 12-15 later when we must have overreached with our national self-image and the Social Revolution of the 60s set in creating something even the best psychiatrists had never before imagined.
Bob Crosby, you can check in and take over here any time as it seems like that was right about the time you were beginning to really cruise! And don't forget to tell all the young people on here how much easier it was to get stoned and get laid back then compared to today or perhaps any other time in recorded human history!