Sean,
I thought I had made my last post on this thread two days ago, but I was struck by your investment at undermining the premise and the language of the thread...that, "nobody is the 'Father' of nothing in even an esoteric sense." I guess I say "struck" because I thought the original titular thread question, "Was CMB really the father of GCA." was not only valid, but pretty fun.
I say "valid,' because if we were in another realm of scholarship (science, history, math, literature) or one of their provincial disciplines (plant bilogy, Roman history, governing dynamics, the poetry of the Spenser) these type of amorphous, unanswerable questions about the context of the discipline come up all the time, they are the subject of books, educational materials, lectures and the like, that advance that knowledge of the subject.
If the infinitesimal amount of people (<2000?) who post and visit these discussions and who are golf architects, architectural critics, GCA afficiandos, or (people merely looking for the great courses to play) DON"T ask this type of question, who will? This is it, right here, this (imo) is the leading colloquy for the examination of GCA.
From that obviously speculative titular question we get supports for the premise and refutations of the premise, we get photos of early American architecture some have never seen and we are exposed to direct biographical snippets and contemporary context that we may have never encountered. This is as it should be, imo.
Of course George Washington isn't the actual Father of Our Country, it would only be so if we were all direct descendants of him but he can be summarized in that way and was so well before there was a sound bite for Americans to consume. Yet I have both seen and read scholars debating that very point, often times in agreement, in differing degrees with the occasional new bird chirping about Alexander Hamilton in preference to GW. These dialogs and books are amongst the most entertaining and enlightening I encounter. why shouldn't it be so for our area of concentration
As for the lesser matters in GCA, I will merely paraphrase a portion of my original post: In all the ways that a father can be taken to mean: co-author, co-creator, financier, protector, physical link to the ancestors and their deeds, authority figure, planner, developer CBM, more than anyone else, can be accurately construed as the Father of Golf Architecture in America.
Cheers
vk