Adam
It seems contrary to the spirit of the game the way I've learned it. Do, or did, the Scots ever treat the sport as an elitist game? Perhaps Ross just wanted to challenge the newer golfer so that they would get better?
To me PENAL is non-recoverable no fun and uninspiring, Putting bunkers in the way, no matter how deep is not penal. It's testing.
Lets take your last point first.
I totally agree that if one can exit a bunker, last resort being a common sense retreat then it has worked as first a trap and then a test to the golfers own strategy (that being something, I feel, we do not teach anymore). The most PENAL hole is the one with these lakes/ponds surrounding the Greens its as if the designers has had a mental block and decided what the hell, I pissed with the design anyway, so lets screw up others as well. These killer holes are not tests, they are not tests they are just a cop out by the designer. As mentioned before its screws the hole, it kills the round and destroys the enjoyment of golf for that particular golfer. Tell me, where is the test in that?
Hazards are HAZARDS for those who may have forgotten that means BE WARE use you brains and whatever skill you possess to navigate this course with care. Any bunker that allows the ball to bounce out is not a trap, therefore not a hazard. Strategic is fine but that requires Penal hazards for the golfer to work out his own strategy for each hole. Are we also trying to stop the golfer thinking as well, thus making him wonder if he is alive or just dreaming his life away as its all so very easy for him.
Adam, as for your first point, yes in the early days only the rich could afford to play golf, as club and more so ball were very expensive. With the introduction of the Gutta Percha ball by the middle of the 19th Century, golf was able to reach more as it became more affordable. Many new clubs formed and with agreement played on the same courses as the rich. i.e. Prestwick Golf Club let Prestwick St Nicholas use their course. Many other clubs in different parts of the country followed their lead, but the course soon became congested, so the new clubs moved seeking their own land and course. These clubs did not have much money and leased land from the Landed Gentry who too started to have an interest in the game. Lets not forget that the super rich had their own private courses and would also have been members of some of the very old and established clubs.
The boom in golf was down to it being more affordable, thus no longer exclusive to the Earls, Dukes and Landed Gentry etc, yet the old and established clubs still retained the air of respectability (loads of money) and many of their Members continued their elitists ways but not all.
As for Ross, remember he was trained under Old Tom and Sutherland, both of the opinion that golf was for all who wanted to play, not just for the Gentry. Although, they both designed courses for the very wealthy in their day.
Melvyn