"...I'm sure in preparation you'll have plied the Internet for days for all things relating to Brown, Repton, Puckler et al...it should be enlightening."
You're sure I will have plied the Internet for days are you? Hmmm!
I see no need at all to go into the life histories of those landscape designers, who their granfathers and fathers were and what they did, what their religous or social beliefs were etc, etc, etc.
The point is that landscape designers like a "Capbility" Brown or Repton were real heavyweights in their field and it's only important to state that because it's totally irrefutable. And it's important to state that beginning with William Kent, and through Brown and Repton, and due to them, the art form of landscape design shifted from the highly formalized landscape style of Italy and early England to a far more natural look and using far more natural lines and features.
And when it comes to the influence of the natural landscape design style and "principles" of Brown or Repton on some of the most notable golf architects of the Golden Age and their philosophies it's only important to point out and quote what they wrote about a Repton's influence on their art, no more.
But when it comes to the matter of influence from the A/C Movement on GCA through landscape design it's only important to point out the fact that the men from landscape design who were given the credit by those Golden Agers (Repton, Brown, Puckler) preceded the A/C movement by app 50 to 100 years. If any of those Golden Age architects mentioned a landscape designer like Gertrude Jekyll as being an influence on their art form, or on the principles of their art form, I'd like to see it, as then it could definitely be taken far more seriously.
And then there was the Scottish linksland, particularly TOC that predated architecture itself as it was used for golf for centuries in the case of TOC...
What the reasons were for those obnoxious looking golf features of the beginnings of golf in England in the so-called "Dark Ages" I have my own theory, and it doesn't have a lot to do with "Victorian aesthetics" and the Industrial Revolution that most of the A/C proponents were revolting against in the latter half of the 19th century for aesthetic reassons but also very much for political and social reasons.
I've asked you a couple of times about your mention of men like Vanderbilt and Astor relative to Willie Park jr, Tom. What's the matter, did a cat get your tongue or was it because I told you what I did about them and you suddenly realized they were probably the last people to support an A/C Movement and a guy like William Morris and his beliefs?