From The Hot Springs Village Voice, 2007:
The problems at Granada today are the uneven fairways which can be traced back to the heavy rains in 2003. Supt. Don Jensen said he is addressing these problems by watering and rolling the fairways with a heavy street roller. This year his budget will let him do holes five, seven, 15 and 17. It will take two and a half years to complete the rolling project. By then, Granada should have smooth fairways on the entire course.__________________________________________________________________________________________________________
From The Life and Work of Wayne Stiles by Bob Labbance & Kevin Mendik:
His (Stiles) first contract was an 18-hole layout for the Nashua Country Club; his contact at the club was Oscar M. Flather. Golf had been played in Nashua since 1896, but the move to a new site in 1916 allowed Stiles to plan a modern layout. Stiles used a steamroller and teams of horses to manipulate the former farmlands, leaving “natural hazards” in many places. While the fairways were “mowed and smoothed off,” the bordering land was “left in the natural condition to add to the difficulties of the unfortunate golfer who drives his ball out of the way,” according to the Nashua Telegram. Irrigation was run to green sites and “the smooth greens would be the envy of a landscape gardener,” as “the grass is kept very short.” __________________________________________________________________________________________________________
A personal experience: a club near me hired a new super and one of his first moves was to take the club's rather heavy tennis court roller to the greens. It left some ridges but they were worked out after a few days by their walk behind mowers. Same thing was done to the fairways to remove washboards caused by careless mowing practices. The results were impressive.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Pat,
The writer's detailed description of the travels of the steamroller, i.e. negotiating the steep hills, crossing the railroad tracks, etc., lend credence to his account.
This rolling effort took place in 1900. I don't believe that the same lush turf that's seen on LI courses today was present at that time. I'd say the troubles CBM had with growing grass at NGLA might be a good example of this. It was most likely a thinner and scruffier grass at that time and frequent rolling would help establish a better growing medium by binding the sandy soils, and a by-product of that would be a firmer, more level playing surface.
Here's a photo of a steam roller for greens, ca. 1903
Golf Roller at Lambton Golf and Country Club, Toronto |Source = Golf, official USGA Bulletin, May 1903, page 344 |Date = May 1903 |
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________
Here's H.J. Whigham on the subject of rolling, from "How To Play Golf":
"Your first object should be to get the turf all through the course in perfect condition. If your land has been lying fallow for several years, your grass is probably sufficiently strong to stand a heavy steam roller. You will find it less expensive to invest in the machine at once rather than waste time and money in working with a horse roller, which, in wet weather, does almost as much harm as it does good. Seaside courses and those which are situated in temperate climates, hardly require such drastic treatment. But on most of the inland courses of America which suffer from the severe frosts in winter, a steam roller will be found invaluable. From three to five tons is the best weight, and the width of the roller should be as great as possible. Roll the whole course as soon as the frost is fairly out of the ground, but beware against repeating the process too often. One good rolling in the spring ought to last a whole season.......and another roller, photo properties reading: How-To-Play-Golf-2/images/Steam-Rollers-For-Golf-Courses
________________________________________________________________________________________________________
The photo from the Lambton course in Toronto shows a roller on the green. Although it's an old photo and not the clearest I think it shows just how rough the greens were and putting heavy rollers on them was quite possibly the main way at the time to create reasonable surfaces for semi-smooth putting.
Smae thing for some fairways, heavy rollers smoothed the ground and allowed the gang mowers to do a better job.