I have been lucky enough to play three of J.F. Abercromby's six courses during my trip to England.
I was thrilled with the Addington. The terrain is unbelievable, and the routing gets the golfer through rough golfing ground in magnificent form. The par fives at 2, 12, and 16 are my favorite set of three-shotters from my trip. Yet Addington comes up a wee bit short for me because of the greens. Scott Warren, I know what you are going to say: the terrain was so wild at Addington that he had to give the golfer a break on the greens. Of course, the two most extreme greens can be found at 12 and 13, holes which also possess the most dramatic land on the course. I just love wild greens, and a course that does not have a ton of interesting greens is going to lack something for me. Furthermore, there is a rumor that Colt did some work at Addington after Abercromby's original layout.
My second Abercromby experience was Worplesdon. Worplesdon might be a notch below Addington, but it is still a very solid heathland layout. I particularly impressed with the greens and centerline hazards at Worplesdon. Yet I also heard that Willie Park, Jr. had some serious involvement with the architecture at Worplesdon. Like many of the London courses, it is very difficult to say which architect designed what features. So many architects worked on so many different courses in the early 1900s. However, those centerline features, fairway bunkers, and wild greens said "Park" more than they did "Abercromby."
I played my third Abercromby this week at Mill Hill at the end of the Northern Line. Sandwiched between the A1 and the M1, Mill Hill plays up and down through undulating but not severe land. The course has a few interesting holes. 7, my favorite hole on the course, is a strategic par four requiring players to hug a creek on the right for the best angle of approach. 3 is a neat short par across a creek. 5 and 13 have two fun elevated greens. 14 is a fun, sidehill short four. Despite these highlights, the course is bland more often than not. It has few strategic driving hazards to dictate play, and the greens are subtle but unexciting. I felt like I was playing golf in Pennsylvania rather than suburban London.
After these experiences with Abercromby, I hasten to wonder how important he was to Golden Age GCA? When considering these three layouts together, I notice that all three share FLAWS more than they share strengths. Addington and Mill Hill lack exciting greens, while the greens at Worplesdon appear to be Park creations. Addington and Worplesdon do not have a good short par four between them. Addington and Mill Hill are short on fairway bunkering, and the driving hazards at Worplesdon also seemed to be Park's doing. Clearly Addington and Worplesdon are great golf courses, but there are hints at both that other, more accomplished architects made the courses what they are today. Did Abercromby build great courses? Or did he lay the groundwork for more accomplished architects to do their thing?