In a recent topic we were talking about Lido.
The subject got sidetracked a bit so if you guys don't mind I'll start another thread to clear up some of
what that course and club was about.
Lido was about a lot of things.
It was about a man’s dream, Sen. Wm. Reynolds, to make the entire stip of Long Beach Island an adult
playground (now keep your minds out of the gutter - we’re talking the 19-teens!).
He had already build Coney Island - Luna Park, the Steeplechase ride, Dreamland and all the great
things that was Coney Island as a sort of kiddie-land playground. (I this where Disney got the idea?)
On Long Beach he was going to do the same but very much more upscale.
Part of that project was the Lido Club - hotel, golf club, the course and amenities that made up that
portion of the entire project.
So the investors were found - the friends of Macdonald - the Vanderbilts, Whtneys, Otto Kahn, J P
Morgan (I think was involved also) - there were many.
Lido Club was to be an International Membership, a club that offering what no other club or course in the
world had: a world class golf course, world class hotel, world class food and amenities, world class
entertainment (imported fm NY City) but mainly something that no other club in the world (at that time
had), a world class beach (Atlantic Ocean) and it’s a good one.
So what came first - the course or Reynolds overall project? I think it was the Reynold’s plan - Lido was
just a part of it.
As for the course - unique in many ways - engineering etc - that’s a grand story in itself but to me it was
the uniqueness of the design bringing in wind and the sandy wastes - was a lot like Pine Valley and this
before PV was built. Macdonald was really only interested in building links courses. He and Raynor
seldom got the opportunity .......... this may have been the best opportunity he (they) were going to get.!
NO TREES - WIND - WASTE HAZARDS off-fairway etc.
Something else. The course was designed in reverse. Macdonald was told to “fashion” the topography on
paper and the investors would pay for filling this virtual swamp to his plans.
They knew he had hole concepts he had not used anyplace els and part of the bait for him to get involved
was that Lido would allow him to use these designs.
Then there was the hole design contest which MacKenzie won - it became #18. But there were others;
the Raynor Prize Dog-Leg, a hole called Strategy, and of course the famous Channel Hole - then they
built the Biarritz right on the beach, yet, with waves virtually lapping close to the original green. The first
three were strategies that evolved from the contest submissions.
MacKenzie hole: I can’t tell if they ever used this concept again except on the original concept drawing for
the Olympic Club (1918)
“Strategy” was used a few times - Olympic drawing and at Raynor’s first course Westhampton (Beach) C
C.. Half of the “strategy” dual-fairway concept was lost early on. I think it was planned other places but
never implemented because clubs didn’t “get it.”
“Raynor’s Prize Dog-Leg was used very often but most times clubs ended up covering the fairway
bunkers - TOO HARD ”what are those bunkers doing in the middle of the fairway?” (duh!) - WHY NOT!
Raynor liked that hole a lot and, I think tried sneaking mild versions of it on the courses.
Channel Hole: CB said it was probably the finest hole he built (designed). Most of you know Harbour
Town’s 18th ..... picture this: drive from the back tee-box - you have two options - go around or play out
to the peninsula. OK - visualize the following: cut off the peninsula from the mainland that portion of the
fairway is now an island; raise it 20-some-odd feet higher. You now have Calabogie Sound in front of you;
on the left side of this piece of elevated land, and on the far side also. Remember, you can’t see the
landing area straight ahead an on a direct line to the green. Where you had cut off the strip of land, have
it look like Pine Valley. Where the OB is on the right at HT, again all Pine Valley wasteland - the optional
“C” shaped fairway, the alternate and longer route, had to be played over water from the tee, had water
all along the left, all waste along the right and on the second shot (often the third shot) you had to play
over water again, then the cross bunker to a green that didn’t accept a shot well.
They were smart enough to put the Channel Hole in the beginning of the front nine - it were late in the
round I doubt if many would have gone for the direct play to the hole. So on the Channel hole (for those
who have not seen the drawings of it) you could play around the outside a three shot hole or you could
play to the blind fairway, short the hole substantially, and perhaps reach the green in two - well near it
anyhow.
Moderate versions of his design were sort of snuck (sneaked - hah) onto some course. Harbour Town-18
is a pretty analogy (although not meant to be a copy) is sort of a flopped over version of Channel.
There is a lot more but there is some info for starters.
gb