I don't remember if I secured this or Sean did, but I love the look of this 1946 aerial.
This is a great image, and is reminiscent in many ways of aerials I have seen (on-line) from Old Barnwell, SC (Schneider & Conant - 2024).
The extensive bunkering patterns (if all were in sand) also have Walter Travis visual hallmarks too.
Not sure if he visited Huntercombe while over in the UK in 1904, when he won The Amateur?
Re. The 6th - Interesting that the LH tree line is still pretty much the same off the drive.
We/I have discussed the less subtle tree planting now in place on the RHS.
This hole (and the course itself) was a notable early transitional bridge from penal to strategic and includes on a largely straight hole a line of diagonal fairway hazards (highlighted further by the track across the fairway) where a player tacks down the hole carrying those hazards prescribed by their own yardage of stroke.
I'd prefer it was kept as "straight" as possible to retain this key chronology of design, but understand the liability issues with a public road bordering the RHS.
This principle was crystallised further and detailed specifically by James Braid in "Advanced Golf" (1908) and is the essence of truly strategic golf. Also, why some still cite Braid as the "inventor of the dog-leg" (even though many such holes existed prior, he detailed why they work and how to design them using diagonal bunkering). He was later asked for his ten favourite courses and Huntercombe was included. So, as per previous discussions relating to HS Colt & Braid working together at Bishops Stortford, there was evidently/coincidentally a flow of; discovery, information, and imitation around this period that began the movement of strategic design and it involved many.
Thanks for sharing this special record of this important course, one at the very forefront of the "Golden Age"