I've just finished writing a report for Huntercombe on the design history of the course. Very interesting stuff. Those who are friends with me on Facebook may recall me asking a cryptic question, viz, which more than 100 year old course was more than 500 yards longer on opening day than it is today, and the answer to that is Huntercombe, though in fairness it is very unsure as to the course's exact length back in 1901. There is a scorecard printed in the Sporting Life around the opening which has the course at a truly remarkable 6,810 yards, although in the club's own early advertising it was listed as 6,503 (still extremely long). And today it is 6,300.
I'll try and upload some of the photos of the course in its early days. Remarkable now that it is so lightly bunkered. Back in the early 1900s there were quite a lot more, and they were BIG. Some were filled in quite early as there were problems finding sand: they dug a pit and were extracting sand from it, but protestors against the course (it was built on an old common) kept coming in at night and dumping all the barrows etc in the pit.
The Travis quote that Ran cites is pretty remarkable. He wasn't the only one to think that. Garden Smith wrote a lot about Huntercombe in its early years and regularly referred to it as the best inland course in the world.
The original clubhouse was Huntercombe Manor itself, on the other side of the Oxford to Henley road. Players had to walk about three or four hundred yards to get to the course and tee off; the course then started on what is now the fourteenth hole, and finished on the thirteenth. Ben Cowan asked about Park template holes recently; the thirteenth (now the eighth) was modelled on the Pandy hole at Musselburgh, and there are stories of Willie repeatedly taking the train home to East Lothian during construction to check out some design detail he wanted to use, always returning within forty eight hours. There's a monograph to be done examining similarities between Huntercombe and Musselburgh; I'm sure that hole isn't the only one.