Adam, thanks for ordering your points and bringing some much needed clarity to this discussion.
1) The Arts and Crafts movement was surely in full swing during the Golden Age of GCA - so it was surely a contributor to the spirit of the age, but it is difficult to say wether it was a CENTRAL DRIVING FORCE, because there were many contributors to the spirit of the age - among them was a move toward nature for the sake of health and well-being, and the rise of the Public Park. Neither of these things are widely associated with the A&C movement, but could certainly be seen as part of the spirit of the age - and therefore, could have played major roles in the popularity boom of golf.
Adam, you are correct that it is difficult to say whether it was a central driving force, especially because the "Arts and Crafts Movement" was multi-faceted and so ill-ill defined.
For example, many Arts and Crafts historians would argue that the "health and well-being" of the broader classes was an integral component of the Arts and Crafts Movement. The same could be argued regarding interaction with nature and government sponsored parks of all sorts. For example, the lodges and structures at our earliest national parks are considered "Arts and Crafts" designs-- some even define a "National Park vernacular."
For a rather emotional "Arts and Crafts" statement on the importance of Parks, here is a link to an article in
Arroyo Craftsman, a Pasadena periodical, from 1912, entitled "Parks for the People: California's Wisdom in Turning Her Ancient Forests into Modern Playgrounds."
http://www.arroyoseco.org/ArroyoCraftsman.htmAnother article concerning Pasadena, this time in a 1924 addition of another Arts and Crafts Era Pasadena magazine
California Southland. It is an editorial by the head of the Pasadena City Planning Commission.
http://www.arroyoseco.org/calsouth1924.htm Note the concern about the blocked vistas and upsetting the "natural flow of the land." Also note the master plan to restore the Arroyo into a "natural park" which includes the development of, among other things, a golf course.
Arts and Crafts influence on our National ) I question the validity of using the term "Victorian Age" in relation to golf course architecture for several reasons.
So perhaps the Arts and Crafts Movement overlaps with much of what you describe as "the spirit of the age." Another way of looking at it would be that the Arts and Crafts Movement was one aspect of the aesthetic expression of "the spirit of the age."
• By this time, the term "Victorian" was already somewhat of a derogatory term, used to discount or criticize creative work. (Yes, largely because of the A&C movement, but also because of the general interest in moving back to nature - which went beyond A&C)
-- A&C was primarily concerned with the industrialization which took place during the Victorian Era.
-- Again, while "moving back to nature" may have gone beyond A&C, moving back to a natural aesthetic was a core component of A&C. How far beyond A&C did the interest in moving back to nature go? Answering this question probably requires defining the absolute outer bounds of the A&C movement, and this is difficult to do.
• The formal arrangement of the courses of people such as Dunn, does not make something "Victorian". It could simply be bad. Golf course architecture was not sufficiently developed to have much of a "method" by this point, so it was just starting as a profession.
--The formal arrangement by itself does not make the architecture "Victorian," but the formal arrangement of the features is certainly consistent with a Victorian Industrial aesthetic and method.
-- While "method" of golf course architecture may not have been developed, golf was already an ancient game played on ancient ground, and the aesthetic of the links courses is as old as the courses themselves. And technology existed to at least make some attempt at representing or reproducing at least some of the aesthetic. Yet apparently no attempt was made to so do. Why didnt they at least try? One explanation is that their behavior was another sign of the times: Replication of the same features on every hole; mathematical precision; symmetry; the products were wholly lacking of individual character; little attempt to blend the natural and the man-made; . . . all characteristics of Victorian Industrialism.
-- And really there was no "profession" at all. These guys were professional golfers, not artists or architects. I think it was MacKenzie who noted that golf architecture was born when this type of architecture died. The designer's became "artists." This is one of the goals of the A&C movement. Victorian industrialization had turned craftsman and builders into mindless machines, and the A&C movement set out to reverse this trend by reestablishing craftsmen and builders as artists who shaped their work with their individuality and creativity.
What is called by some "Victorian" was actually occurring simultaneously to more traditional development, which suggests to me that "The Dark Ages" may have been little more than a relatively short-lived run of crappy architecture - and not any well-established "age" of any kind.
You lost me here a bit. Not sure you are referring to just golf design, but I assume you are. What "traditional development" was going on during this period? As I understand it, there is often a large amount of overlap between movements in art. But to what overlap are you referring.
• Architects of the time were competing. Therefore the use of the term "Victorian" by men such as MacKenzie could simply have been an effort to discount competitors, and work he didn't approve of. The use of the word does not make and 'age' or an 'era'.
Maybe, but I doubt it for a few reasons. First, MacKenzie was writing in the 1930's, long after the supposed "Dark Ages" ended, so it wasnt like he was dissing his immediate competitors. Leach was not an architect but a journalist and writer, and was also writing a few decades after, at the death of WP, Jr. Secondly and more importantly, there is near complete agreement among the commentators of the time and later (even C&W) that there was a distinct style of design during the supposed Dark Ages. No matter how they labeled it, MacKenzie, Leach, Hutchinson, Simpson, Behr, C&W,Hunder and others describe a similar characteristics consistent with a distinct style of design. If they all saw fit to address and describe this distinct style of design, I am not sure why so many of us are comfortable dismissing so readily.
• The growing popularity of golf and the establishment of increasingly standardized golf equipment meant that there was more and more of a "mathematical, formulaic" basis which architects had to careful not to get trapped by. (This club hits this far on average, so we'll always put a hazard there). This simple pitfall still traps architects today, so we can't discount it in the early stages of GCA. The fact that some of the courses created in the early growth of the game inland had "formal" or "formulaic" layouts could just as easily be attributed to low levels of creativity in the face of a strong mathematical framework as it could be attributed to "The Victorian Age".
Adam, I hate to sound like a broken record, but when you describe "low levels of creativity in the face of a strong mathematical framework" you could be an A&Cer describing the evil consequences of the industrialization of the Victorian Age. Same thing with mass production.
3) Some of golf's Golden Age development was in direct contrast to the true motivations of the A&C.
• The A&C favored handicrafts, GCA used machines whenever they could.
There were schools of A&C that disfavored the use of any tools whatsoever, but there were also those that favored the upmost use of technology.
• The A&C favored the use of local materials and an honesty in production which utilized the materials at hand. GCA almost invariably used SAND - regardless of wether or not the site contained it. This point alone seems to suggest the core importance of the early links over A&C ideals. The fact is that GCA has always been making one artificial reproduction of the links or another all these years. Some are more abstracted than others - but it remains the clear and visible driving force.
I think you misundstand the "A&C ideal." If there was an A&C ideal in gca, it would be to return the aesthetic of the early, pre-industrial, links as a guiding light. Part of this would be to incorporate the extisting landscape and local vernacular into the course, but part may also have been to carry forward portions of the pre-industrial exemplars.
I think we might want to look at COMMUNICATION in our search for the driving forces behind the golden age. How many of the GOlden Age architects were sharing ideas at this time? How many travelled in the same circles? Could the publication of such magazines as Country Life been more important to the development of the Golden Age because it served to "CONNECT" - rather than to push the ideals of a single movement?
Wasnt Country Life a magazine that celebrated Arts and Crafts? (Not a rhetorical question.)