Tim
I think you are viewing the golden age through slightly rose tinted spectacles. It was indeed a wonderful time for golf course architecture in terms of the advancement and dissemination of ideas and the design and construction of some wonderful courses. However the ODG's from that era weren't shy in changing each others work or on occasion their own work. So did they get things "wrong" or did some one just find a way to make a hole/course better ?
The other thing is we tend to judge some of these ODG's by what is in the ground now and that may well have been altered over the years by other architects, erosion, plant growth etc. So when you say you want to preserve Harry Colt's design at some lovely old links, how sure are you that what you are in fact looking at is his handy work ?
Niall
Niall,
I accept your point about ODGs changing each other's work. In fact, to show how bias I am, I have no doubt that if I was a member of the Honourable Company, and Simpson came knocking, I would likely have opposed any changes he made. And I acknowledge that he improved the course from all that we can see, and gave us one of the best par-3s in Scotland.
All that being said, I still believe, based on what I've seen and read (which isn't as much as some!), that many courses haven't materially improved post-golden age as a result of changes that weren't restorative in nature (either to a principle, or what was actually on the ground). In my mind, and this may be revisionist history, I can accept ODGs changing older courses, and even changing each other's work because they were establishing a new type of golf course design (strategic), where rules were being literally written and rewritten at the time.
Since then though, I can't see any major shift in GCA thinking that makes me feel older courses can be improved upon. For sure tastes and styles come and go, but the golden age was going from victorian and primitive styles of golf courses to ones that enhanced enjoyment and brought golf to the masses. I don't see a similar change in thinking that would lead me to believe that altering a Harry Colt course is a good idea.
But even if we take the above to be false, and I accept that this is just my opinion, but I'd rather have a Harry Colt that is a Doak 6, than a Colt, Steel, Mackenzie that is a Doak 7. I'd rather see a Colt course and understand who he was as an architect, what he valued, and what made him different, rather than playing a 'better' course. I love variety, and therefore, I'm always going to say 'leave it be and enjoy it for what it is'. I'm sure Colt or Mackenzie had a few misses, but I don't think that's any reason to update their courses. (I do acknowledge what Mark / Vinny say and minor tweaks here and there to a living breathing course are inevitable, but I believe were talking about updating greens/holes/routings, etc).
To bring the principle up to date, if we look at a Doak course like Renaissance, it isn't one of Doak's most well known courses, and I don't even think Tom himself would put it in his Top 5 favourite courses that he's done, but I'd be saddened if someone else came along in 30 years time and said 'Yup, I can improve this course'. Maybe he could, but I'd rather see what Doak did and understand / study where his strengths and weaknesses lay.
I appreciate I am a bit naive in this sense, but that's what I cherish, and some of the thinking behind why I will likely always want to 'leave well enough alone'.
If it isn't well-enough - then have at it!
PS - SPOILED: Eden Course - how has no one brought that up?!