SeanA, It's true if whoever provides the brief doesn't mind if his/her golfers lose ten balls in a row or expect the architect to build a golf course on a tiny, hilly parcel of land filled with cliffs. Some might want cop bunkers and a steeplechase course too, or for that matter, a golf course that meanders through a housing development. Architects do have to be responsive to their customers' wishes.
Putting aside the fact that there is a way to play the hole safely, do you think the 16th at Cypress is the ultimate example of a great penal design? MacKenzie says, "Players get such a tremendous thrill driving over the ocean at the spectacular 16th and 17th holes at Cypress Point that this also is well worth the risk of losing a ball or two."
Niall, In regard to the Arts & Crafts philosophy and its impact on the Golden Age, I ought to go back to Hutchinson and find some of his most relevant writings, but I don't know those well enough. And this is a thread on Colt! But, hope you might dwell upon this from Alister MacKenzie on beauty in golf architecture. He wasn't just a blood and guts military type. It is the best description I have read yet of one of the fundamental elements of the Golden Age.
"Often one hears players say that they 'don't care a tinker's cuss' about their surroundings, what they want is good golf....The chief object of every golf architect or greenskeeper worth his salt is to imitate the beauties of nature so closely as to make his work indistinguishable from Nature herself."
"A beautiful hole appeals not only to the short but also to the long handicap player, and there are few first rate holes which are not...in the grandeur of their undulations and hazards, or the character of their surroundings, things of beauty in themselves."
"My reputation of the past has been based on the fact I have endeavored to conserve the existing natural features and, where these were lacking, to create formations in the spirit of nature herself. In other words, while always keeping uppermost the provision of a splendid test of golf, I have striven to achieve beauty."
"on deeper analysis it becomes clear that the great courses, and in detail all the famous holes and greens, are fascinating to the golfer by reason of their shape, their situation, and the character of their modeling. When these elements obey the fundamental laws of balance, of harmony and fine proportion, they give rise to what we call beauty....in the course of time he (the player) grows to admire such a course as works of beauty must be eventually felt and admired."
Jim Sherma, Interesting idea of yours about TOC. I was trying to think of some analogy to TOC outside of golf architecture. Maybe the Magna Carta, which some think was "the greatest constitutional document of all times."
In regard to the blind contest in Country Life won by MacKenzie, the timing is interesting. Adam notes that MacKenzie was accepted into the R&A in 1913. One year later, he won the contest judged by the Oxbridge and R&A leaders, Hutchinson, Darwin and Fowler. It doesn't seem infeasible that there was some degree of orchestration inside the R&A in regard to how to approach the rapidly growing American market. If there was a group coordinating matters more generally, who were the key members of the braintrust: Hutchinson, Colt, Low, Darwin, and Froome?