My original intent, although possibly not explained well, is to identify courses that were held in high esteem a half century ago who's past prominence and history were later discarded in a renovation counter to the style of the original architect. Specifically evoking the style of a different architect in the redesign.
We've seen examples of new courses intended to mimic the work of past greats, Old Mac and Black Creek for example, and there have been no name courses that have been redesigned in a completely different style than the original. But has this happened with a course that was once seen favorably in the public eye? (e.g. hosted a major championship or regular tour event, once ranked or written about frequently)
Mark,
Bucknell sounds pretty close to what I'm looking for. Did Ault make any changes to the original 9 in the 60's? Also, how high profile was Bucknell back in the day? One aspect I'm very curious about is the shift is reputation and if a course would foregoe the design that built up their reputation because that architect / style was no longer popular.
Kyle,
In the case of courses such as Old Mac and Black Creek, using the inspired by tag is probably sufficient protection. In other cases, If the inspired by architect did do some work on the course originally that may also be enough. I would hope that no course would blatantly claim their freshly renovated course was a MacKenzie design.
It's highly possible this scenario has never happened before. Odds are an RTJ or Dick Wilson design that held acclaim in years past would want to hang onto that history. But as golf courses build before the 70's are now past the 50 year mark and many of the original members are no longer around, I wonder if memberships with an affinity towards the golden age are getting rid of their dark age courses for a design reminiscent of the favorite classical architects.
Timewise, courses built in the 50's and 60's today are nearly as old as the classic era courses were when the restoration movement really started up. Based on the popular view of today, it seems they will not get the same preservation treatment.