Frankly I don’t think anyone took him seriously...
Tom MacW -
I don't know how they could have taken Crane more seriously.
Where to begin. Behr wrote the eight essays in his "Permanent Architecture" as a long argument against Crane. Crane is mentioned throughout. In the 6th essay Behr sets up a Socratic dialogue with Crane, feeling the need to refute him point by point. Crane's rating of TOC was mentioned but was not the real issue. The issues were fundamental golf design questions, as in penal v. strategic desing.
MacK felt it important to respond to Crane in an essay in GI. The first chapter of his The Spirit of SA was directed at Crane and the rest of the book is - in essence - setting up Crane's arguments and then shooting them down. Again, TOC issues were the icing on a much bigger cake.
The books published from '26 through '29 by Hunter, MacD, Thomas, Simpson etc have the same structure. Some mention Crane by name, some don't, but they were all books whose central theme was making the case against penal architecture and for strategic architecture. These were not even-handed textbooks that surveyed the design field. They had an axe to grind and they ground it. The tone of the books makes the conclusion inescapable that they were composed in the context of a pretty intense on-going debate. We also need to remember that the people that bought and read those books in the '20's would have been quite familiar with that debate. (Otherwise, they would have found their tone quite odd.)
There was only one person I know of in the mid 20's who was making case those architects were trying to rebut. That's Crane. Do you have another candidate in mind? Because somebody had clearly gotten under their skin.
Of course his rating system was ridiculed. It was an easy way to discredit his other views. It's an old debate trick. Used it myself. But Crane couldn't be simply dismissed as a kook. Otherwise, people wouldn't have felt the need to devote so much time and effort to rebut him.
Writing books is very hard work. It simply makes no sense to undertake that work for an issue that "no one took seriously". To the contrary, all the evidence points to the issues Crane raised as being a very, very big deal for architects of the era. It was not a neutral issue for them. We've got the great gca books of the Golden Age as Exhibit 1.
We can quibble until the cows come home about Crane being in the spotlight. He was. There is no doubt that from '25 to '27 he made regular appearances in the big golf mags. No one else appeared as frequently on gca and course reviews during those two years, which are the years that matter. He was a very well-known figure.
I don't see whether he was liked or not has a bearing on anything. (BTW, I'm not at all sure he was liked. The evidence is sketchy. I don't think B. Jones liked him, but my evidence is indirect. I do know that he was fired as the Harvard football coach after a single season because, as far as I can tell, he was hated by the team and they quit playing for him, losing the last three games of the season after winning all six of their prvious games. Which suggests, at a minimum, a strong personality. Or worse.)
Bob