I’ve changed my mind. I think this thread, despite unusual length has been a good one and has probably gotten better in the last few pages. It also seems the primary proponents that Tillinghast compromised his architectural principles during the 1935-36 PGA project are Tom MacWood and Mike Cirba. Frankly, I’d never exactly thought of that before although even from my own club I’m aware of at least 3-4 waves of redesign of my Ross course from 1933-1940. I’d never thought of those redesigning architects as compromising their principles, although I’ve always thought of those times as good examples of how architects of that time redid the golf courses of other architects with very little thought or consideration to what those original architects did. I believe in most cases those redesigning architects were simply responding to something about the golf course and its architecture that the membership probably felt wasn’t working very well for them for whatever reason.
However, although that appears to have been a fairly general happenstance in that era (at least at my club), the subject of this thread--”Was Tillinghast selling out or compromising his architectural principles” by getting involved in this type of thing in a sort of formal way with the PGA is a bit of a different spin on this general subject of what was going on during the Depression.
Phil said to Tom MacWood:
“We are having a difference of opinion, that is all. I have understood the thread from the first post. You have been insisting that what Tillinghast believed and practiced throughout his career was changed by insisting that something happened in 1935, and then presenting what you believe to be as proofs, you pronounce it as fact.”
I also said that to Tom MacWood a number of threads back and perhaps a number of times. In the last day I believe what Phil just said there is more true than ever. Tom MacWood, in my opinion, is not going about analyzing this question correctly. As Phil apparently does, I too think Tom is both misrepresenting facts and also probably misunderstanding them. I believe this is almost completely distorting the validity of his assumptions, his premise and his conclusions.
Here, in my opinion, are some statements from Tom MacWood and also Mike Cirba that show why this is so, in my opinion;
“Phil
That article is about the diagonal hazard and has nothing to do with the duffer's headache or Duffer's Range...in fact the accompanied diagram has a diagonal bunker in the Duffer's range....bad form by 1936“.
In my opinion, the diagonal hazard within the so-called duffer’s range has everything to do with the so-called “Duffer’s Headache” and the Duffer’s range! How could it not? Matter of fact, it happens to be one of Tillinghast’s very clever prescriptions for how to solve the problems of the previous obligatory carry so unappealing in the so-called Duffer’s Range and at the very same time maintain some challenge and excitement for the duffer within that range. Is Tom MacWood misunderstanding or denying that? If so, why? If Tom MacWood is suggesting Tillinghast later compromised his architectural principles in 1936 then perhaps he should prove that in 1936 Tillinghast came back and recommended removing all his diagonal or oblique bunkering within the duffer’s range that four years previous he‘d suggested was the solution for the problems for the duffer within that range. Did he do that? Not that I’m aware of!!!
Mike Cirba said:
"Tom, I agree that what Tillie is describing here is exactly ideal. However, I don't agree that the removal of all bunkers at less than say 200 yards accomplishes this and in fact runs directly counter to his ideal that "hazard lines which grade the shots to the limitations of each".
Mike:
Can you prove Tillinghast recommended the removal of ALL bunkering less than 200 yards from every tee? I don’t think you can do that!
Mike also said;
"Tom, it's difficult to imagine that he didn't prescribe clearing out the middle of ALL bunkers 175 yards or closer when he recommended the removal of 7000 bunkers, don't you think?"
Mike:
No I don’t think so. Did Tillinghast or the PGA say that Tillinghast recommended clearing out 7,000 bunkers from the middle 175 yards or less from tees or was that 7,000 bunkers total on all parts of golf holes he recommended removing? There is a pretty big difference, don’t you think? If either you or Tom MacWood can show me where Tillinghast specifically said 7,000 bunkers in basically that first DH zone (175 yards of less from the tee) and also that he recommending clearing out ALL bunkering in that zone then I’ll sure reconsider this statement of mine. Again, reconsider it and then attempt to find out if he actually did recommend removal of ALL bunkering in that zone including what he may have previously built himself and also suggested in that 1932 article regarding diagonal or oblique bunkering within that zone. There is at least one quote I’ve seen from Tillinghast where he recommended bunkering in that zone, only shorter.
There is another subject that eventually will probably need to be brought up in light of this subject and that’s the subject of tees! In other words, how and when did separate tees for the duffer start to influence and impact this entire question of the Duffer zone?
Mike Cirba:
The question of the so-called championship course is a good one and a very good subject for another thread.