Sven point taken but sometimes I wonder whether there's a collective mentality of, "things were so much better in the gold old days".
I guess another bias would be the "old masters" have enjoyed 100+ years plus of the maturing process on their courses too.
And I repeat, they had the pick the best sites.
That all said I love the work of Colt et al...!
Not sure if I agree with the best sites thought.
You had to be able to get to the course, and at first that meant being near a train line. When the auto came along, you could still only go where the roads would take you, and those roads didn't go many places back in the 20's. Golf courses were predominately built near population centers, and population centers weren't necessarily built on or near land that was ideal for golf.
I think there's something to the "time" argument raised earlier in the thread. Pine Valley wouldn't be built the way it was today, nor would Oakmont. The labor of love course is a thing of the past, and I think that's one aspect of golf course design that was "so much better in the good old days."
What's interesting to me in this conversation is that we lump all of these old courses into one category - namely that they are old. But a Raynor is a different course from a Mackenzie which is a different style from what the early guys like Bendelow and Findlay were doing. Perhaps the conversation should be an analysis of the styles used back then, and why the one's that survived (or are represented in the work being done of late) still have relevance today.
Sven