"Tom,
Whitten and Cornish gave credit to Flynn in The Architects of Golf for Kitanssett. I always attributed Hood as the guy who built it similar to Tillinghast and Burbeck at The Black.
Mark"
Mark,
Cornish and Whitten credit Flynn with the routing and it seems Frederick Hood with the design, along with one hole redesigned by Steven Kay. I can't imagine what that one was since the course matches old photos very closely...and the Flynn plans too.
Tom Doak,
We have the plans for holes 1,2,4,5,6,7,8(par 3),14(par 3),15,16,17 and 18. Every hole (except the par 3s) had interrupted fairways. Several of the interruptions were there when we first visited (sorry Tom Paul, your memory doesn't serve you well on this one) although I don't think the rough is maintained at the height that they were intended to be. Tom Paul does remember correctly that the old guard are/were not fond of it.
Flynn was designing interrupted fairways from the time he was finishing Pine Valley through 1925 then he seemed to stop. It seems they either weren't built that way in some cases and they certainly weren't retained in all but a few.
The Cascades is returning some of the interruptions and have done so to 2 and 5? as of now.
I agree that the par 3 11th at Kittansett is terrific. That's a heck of a green on such a long hole. Bill Dow showed me exactly how to play that hole when I lose distance, as he has in his mid-70s.
That is a wonderful golf course and a fabulous club. Tom Doak, did you stop and check out George Thomas's Marion GC up the road from Kittansett? I think it is 1906, it is really neat. Stone walls and hedges to carry; tons of quirk--Tom Paul calls it a steeple chase course.
Dave Miller,
Craig Disher found an aerial of the second incarnation of Aronimink near City Avenue. Wasn't this in a different spot than the original Belmont Golf Association? I'm looking for Pons Asinorum and can't find it anywhere.