I have been fortunate to research and publish work on several relatively unknown and underappreciated American golf architects including Wayne Stiles, Dick Wilson and now H. C. Leeds. Their golf courses and individual holes continue to challenge golfers and remain relevant today. Much has been altered, but many great examples of their original work remain, and equally important, are available to the public.
My research on Mr. Leeds was initially to be included in a book to follow Shaping the American Landscape (The Cultural landscape Foundation 2009), but I learned last fall that his profile did not make it through the editorial process; the editors choosing instead to include modern (post WWII) golf architects Dick Wilson and Geoffrey Cornish. I had concluded long ago that Leeds’s work was groundbreaking, well ahead of its time, and extremely important to the history of American golf architecture, hence the decision to seek a broader outlet for the research.
I naturally turned to GCA and spent additional time expanding the piece, adding photos and other images. Given that only 4 of his courses are extant and only 1 is public (although Palmetto allows a degree of public play during Masters Week), few golfers have had the pleasure (assuming one likes climbing stairs in and out of bunkers) of playing over his designs. His seminal work at the Myopia Hunt Club is largely intact, and given its competition history, classic early American golfscape and today’s restoration efforts, this article offers more glimpses of that club and its history.
I have been extremely fortunate to have spent considerable time at Myopia over many years, and with the valuable input and assistant of several people at the club, are able to bring this research to GCA. I look forward to your comments, discussions and queries (no doubt I have missed or mischaracterized some things here) and appreciate your collective patience in my responses.
My primary goal is simple: to give Mr. Leeds the recognition he deserves as one of the most important figures in the development of American golf architecture. Here is the link:
http://golfclubatlas.com/in-my-opinion/mendik-kevin-h-c-leeds-the-papa-of-american-golf-architecture/ From my home office in Waban, Massachusetts overlooking a classic American golf course, August 2016.
Regards,
Kevin