David Moriarty:
Let me just say this, and if you really consider it carefully, I think it can serve to get us off the dime of this constant adverserialness on here, at least about C.B. Macdonald and what his career was all about not just in and of itself but how it may've affected other architects and their approach at the time and afterwards----at the very least in an architecturally "symbolic" sense----ie Man as the ultimate Creator of GCA or Land (Nature itself) as the ultimate Creator or canvas.
I just reread the first page and a half of that six year old thread of yours "Re: Did Macdonald 'Jump the Shark' with The Lido?" and I can very clearly see how your primary point was pretty much misundertood as most of the rest of us (not all to some extent but most of us) sort of compartmentalized the thread into other points or subjects or Sub-subjects that didn't have much to do with your point. Some seemed to understand your point or premise but just rejected it out-of-hand fairly quickly.
Your first post really wasn't bad at all or misleading at all (with my recent rereading) as you claimed it may've been on your post #33. That post (#33) was very clear as to what you were trying to say.
I think this (that thread) is a large and fascinating and very important subject and I think it should be reprised (or restarted on another thread) and thoroughly discussed on here.
The irony may be that even though I apparently missed your point in that thread six years ago I don't think I am missing its point now, and I also believe I pretty much completely agree with the point you really were trying to make on that thread.
Frankly, I don't think it even matters if no golf course like a Lido was done again for the next half century; it occurs to me that the fact The Lido happened the way it did very well may've turned much of the Golden Age and some of its most signficant architects down a road that was essentially the opposite of Lido and that may even explain some of Macdonald's later discontent with the things he saw around him into the 1920s and beyond!