Also interestingly for those who love a "steeplechase" ridge or bunker (no stump grinders back then so simple burying of this linear feature was necessary):
"The griefs of the hedgerows at the 15th green in the afternoon virtually decided the match"
Thank you Simon, impressive research. I was aware of the trilogy but one review in the BGCS didn't persuade me to buy. You clearly think highly of it? It's hard to get publicity for this kind of work.
Firstly. 're the hedgerows as a cross hazard. In Essex it is believed these are a Braid feature. I did start a thread on here giving examples of Theydon Bois GC and (in its original routing) the third, 6th and 17th at West Essex. No one on here could give other examples. These were very early courses from him and before he was an Open Champion, he was then the Scottish Professional at Romford GC just starting to "layout" courses and doing local work. I speculated that he left them in place as he wouldn't have had the budget to remove them. But your example is a) also in Essex b) much later work and c) of a high budget. Curious.
I'm A member at West Essex and you are welcome to visit.
I was also intrigued by your reference to double greens in another thread. I wasn't aware of that and there was one at West Essex lost when they did a land swap in the 60's.
Carter's Seeds were involved in Golf Course construction right from Walton Heath at the beginning of modern work. Somewhere on here, the much missed and sadly late Tom MacWood, named a man who worked for them as an on site "Architect" and they often worked with Braid (sadly you'll find the search function on here is "limited" in its efficiency at best).
Have you played Purdis Heath and Woodbridge? Although only a few miles apart they are quite contrasting. The former has a beautiful blind sunken green but mostly, like West Essex, they are small targets. The later has larger ones and overall feels quite different. Both are out of the way of most touring golfers, but are worth the trip. I'm sure an invitation to Woodbridge can be secured .
Thanks Tony, and very kind.
Would love to join you, when this darn rain stops!
West Essex (1900) is the oldest original James Braid 18-Hole course still in existence, and this consequently on my must-play list this year.
The "steeplechase" features were necessary due to the lack of stump grinders and for speed and cost keeping them and burying these "Natural" features added to the "sport" of the early courses.
Dunn was particularly fond of them, and added some where hedges simply did not exist!
Some were just ridges, some were ditches then ridges, some sand bunkers then ridges,
Michael Morrison has written about them in a BCGS 3-parter on Dunn, which is well worth a read.
They were pervasive in England on many courses, but fewer and fewer left (e.g. Henley sadly removed two sets of these in 1994 as they chased length and modernised!)
Note - Braid was so innovative that he specifically detailed that any path between such hazards be "s-shaped" and not straight so that a ball would not simply run through the gap but be caught by one side or the other regardless!
Interestingly, Brian Schneider of Renaissance Golf has just used these "steelplechase ridges" as a feature at Old Barnwell in the US, they look great!
Another quirky and inherited feature of the time that Braid used, and is surprisingly on several courses still (including at Henley) is the humble Hawthorn bush (cut as a ball on a stick) in collections as a hazard. At Romford he even has some of these in bunkers!
Re. Double Greens - I am collating a list (its far more extensive than people will expect, and I saw an old thread from c.2003 on here with some great debate)...I am including "Lost " ones so would be very interested to know specifically which holes these were. They may be Braid's first use of the feature, I had previously thought Henley was (1st/17th are back-to-back and were one green originally with a "Biarritz" gulley between them) so that's great info Thanks!
Suffolk on the agenda too! Sadly, I've only played c. 120 of James Braid's courses so far so, another two to visit!
Cheers