Like Pat Mucci, I'm a big fan of "top shot bunkers" -- often called cross-bunkers. Some even call these "duffer's headaches".
Classic architects envisioned golf as a ground game. As such, they used the land as an opportunity to position bunkers. Donald Ross, for example, employed cross-bunkers — often patterned in diagonal alignments -- immediately off the tee to direct golfers in conjunction with the prevailing movement of the terrain. Sometimes cross-bunkers guided you up a slope or over a ridge to a landing area "not readily visible from the tee". Other times, Ross intended for golfers to utilize their visual impact to orient and shape suggested shots in conjunction with the flow of the land. They also played tricks on depth perception, because golfers could not readily visualize the extent of terrain to the target beyond these bunkers.
Through the years, however, especially during the Depression, some heavy-handed green committees abandoned cross-bunkers in a wholesale effort to alleviate maintenance particularly since they were often well short of play -- and therefore were considered meaningless. Many think, master architect, A.W. Tillinghast was the one person responsible for the wholesale elimination of cross-bunkers in the 1930’s. Experiencing financial woes during the Great Depression, Tillinghast was forced to go on the payroll of “The PGA of
America” in 1935 and spent four years touring the country, inspecting golf courses, and advising them on how to save money during those hard times. His most frequent advice was to fill-in bunkers. His primary targets were “cross-bunkers” located just off the tee. Tilly justified their elimination because they were expensive to maintain at the time -- and they caused “duffer’s headaches”. Yet the very one’s that Tillinghast filled-in formed the fabric of strategic golf design in the US.
Classic “cross-bunkers” provide visual assistance with orientation and direction and visual challenges with depth and distance. Plus, they swallowed up a few grounders.
Nevertheless, Tilly's removal of these "top shot bunkers" or "duffers headaches" served as a nationwide endorsement for clubs to remove these themselves "in house". Plus, generations of architects and green chairmen thereafter took his lead and designed courses without strategic “cross bunkers” and “carry bunkers” in mind.
Today, a dedicated group of restoration specialists have faithfully devoted their talents to restoring and bringing back these distinctive design features. To me, none are more symbolic of Ross's style and identity than his cross-bunkers. Golf aficionados across the country should applaud these efforts.