Old thread, but what the hey...
I've played quite a few William Mitchell courses, albeit unwittingly, and for a mid-handicapper like myself, they are consistently fun and challenging.
The Saratoga Spa course in Saratoga Springs, NY, will celebrate its 50th anniversary this year. This public course is set in a piney park, and is routed so that rarely do you see, and are never distracted by play on other holes.
This course shares many of the aspects lauded in golden age courses: wide fairways, a variety of challenges, a natural quality other than the built up greens, but then only because the course is essentially flat. Water is used minimally, but effectivley on 3 and 4. There is almost no OB in play, but the woods are used strategically on a number of holes where the better approach tempts the player to hug the treeline.
Bunkers are limited, generally large, and mostly strategic. A very dramatic bunker gaurding the ninth green looks like a tsunami frozen in sand. A large cross bunker 60 yards out on the par 5 17th protects the approach for long hitters. On the par 5 6th, a flat green is protected by a large, visible bunker 20 yards from the green right, a less visible, shallower bunker left, and a hidden bunker off the green behind. For variety, the par 5 12th has a deep greenside bunker protecting the front of a steeply pitched, shallow green, leaving the player pondering a run up through a channel on the right or a perfectly placed longer club to reach the green in two.
All of this is by way saying that for a course of this era, this and a number of other of his courses remain relevant, vibrant, tests of golf for the average golfer. In this category I place McCann in Poughkeepsie, Town of Colonie in Colonie, NY. While these are not destination courses, they are honest golf courses that deserve recognition, and in some ways are worthy of emulation.
Taken in the context of their era, the golf boom of the post war years, the Mitchell courses I've seen are huge successes. These public courses met the need to provide quality golf to the masses, and the fact that they are still popular 50 years on shows that the qualities his courses exhibit tap into more than the design motif du jour.
For anyone who wants an enjoyable $30 walk in the park, based on the courses I've seen, I would definitely recommend the courses of William Mitchell.