About 4 months ago I came across a copy of Golf in America: The First One Hundred Years by George Peper and the Editors of Golf Magazine at a charity book sale. In in I was pleased to come across a neat essay by Tom Doak called "The Course of Architecture."
In reading the essay, I came across an interesting point in which Tom claims points out that Oakmont was America's first "Milestone" golf course. However, I wasn't entirely sold on his reasoning;
"America's first milestone course was the Oakmont Country Club outside Pittsburgh, founded in 1903 by Henry and William Fownes, whose philosophy of design was stated emphatically: 'A poorly played shot...should be a shot irrevocably lost.' Since William Fownes's standard of what constituted a well-played shot was very high, his Oakmont layout was an extreme test of golf. In its heyday, the Oakmont eighteen included narrow fairways, about 220 bunkers, 21 drainage ditches, sharply tilted greens maintained at breakneck speed, and more length than any course of its day, because Fownes anticipated the acceptance of the livelier Haskell ball. Oakmont spawned a wave of early courses that imitated its penal philosophy."
So would you agree with Tom's assessment with Oakmont being the first "Milestone" course built in America over places such as Chicago Golf Club, Newport, Myopia Hunt, The Country Club, and Maidstone? Does a course have to be hard to be considering a "milestone?"