Under the Langford thread, Tom Paul mentions that Wayne Stiles recommended the removal of many 'fore bunkers' at his home club, Gulph Mills, during the 1940s. And that the master plan Stiles devised for Gulph Mills was terrible, essentially taking away much of Ross' fine original work. I'd probably agree, having read Tom's 'evolution of Gulph Mills' booklet.
Anyway, this lead me to think about the work A.W. Tillinghast undertook on behalf of the PGA of America during The Great Depression. Tillinghast toured the United States and advised clubs on course changes aimed to reduce maintenance costs. As so many of us know, Tillinghast advised on the removal of, what, hundreds? Maybe thousands of bunkers, on classic courses throughout the USA? [I don't know the number.]
Was his advice justified considering the circumstance? And, in turn, was Stiles' advice to Gulph Mills justified 'under the circumstance'? [I don't know for sure.]
On the same note, was Perry Maxwell's reconstruction of several Ross designed greens at Gulph Mills justified?
I'll admit, I'm the first one to criticized a contemporary golf architect for messing with a classic course. The point is, if we look back in history, so many of the so-called 'classic architects' tinkered with the original works of their contemporaries. Yet today, we rarely hold them accountable for such actions, do we? Should we, in at least in some cases, do so? For the sake of historical accuracy.
Just a thought.