RJ:
Your post is interesting and asks some pretty good questions about what the first intentions were of some of those people we call the famous "amateur" architects, the "One Trick Pony" architects when they first got into those projects that made them and their courses famous.
There's just no question about it RJ, none. All we have to do is read their words later and look carefully at both the lives of those men and the histories and evolutions of those handful or two or remarkable courses they did, particularly in those very early years of American architecture.
What were the common themes in every single one of them?
1. Initial inexperience
2. The desire and the ability to go abroad and study what was there that was respected (Exactly where they went is another story unto itself, in my opinion, particularly the early heathlands for those building inland courses over here in that very early era).
3. A virtual never ending fixation on all the details of their projects which in every case took the rest of their lives and in a few more than one might expect actually appear to have literally taken their lives.
In basic chronological order---Leeds, Emmet, Macdonald, Travis, Fownes, Wilson, Crump, and even the ultra professional, Donald Ross.
What was the common theme that made their Myopia, GCGC, NGLA, Oakmont, Merion, Pine Valley, Pinehurst #2. so world famous?
The common theme was that every single one of them never stopped fixatedly working on their beloved projects their ENTIRE LIVES. Who else did that? Who else? No one!
Did any of them know they were going to do that when they first got into those projects or golf architecture? Not a single one of them ever said they knew that in the beginning or ever saw it coming.
Hugh Wilson's remark on that subject:
"Looking back on the work, I feel certain that we would never have attempted to carry it out, if we had realised one-half the things we did not know.".
And that remark was written only four years after it all began. But he never stopped with Merion East and would continue working on it diligently for the next ten years until his death at 45.
The thing most everyone on here seems not to realize or appreciate well enough about those early architects like those ones I mentioned of that early era is the thing that kept most every single one of those guys going and going and going day after day in that early era really wasn't as much their architecture as it was their agronomy.
For us that subject and issue clearly isn't as interesting and sexy as architecture but to those guys back then there was not other way around it. We need to understand that better about those guys back then or we never will really understand them and what consumed them most all the time.
We just don't understand the way that really was back then we are so used to what we see and know today.
It was a wholly different world from anything any of us can relate to today. Sure they could study and experiment with the latest architectural styles but they basically didn't know how to establish turf. No one over here in that early time around the beginning of the teens really did.
Who could they turn to over here? There wasn't anybody. The first of them turned to the US Dept of Agriculture!!
Are you kidding me?? Those guys, Piper and Oakley, when first asked about golf agronomy didn't know a damn thing about golf agronomy but they sure did know how to make things grow. They were botanists and they knew how to make things grow and analyze diseases and such. Is it any wonder Piper became the first Chairman of the USGA's green section and Oakley the Vice Chairman?
You guys may not know this but those early guys like Wilson, Harban et al just about got Piper and Oakley to convince President Woodrow Wilson that the United States of America's Dept of Agriculture needed to take the lead and total responsibility for American golf agronomy. That almost happened!!
"As one greenkeeper puts it, it is easy to grow grass but very difficult to get turf"
Hugh Wilson, in his 1915 report about the creation of Merion
"It will be one of the greatest courses if they can get the grass to grow."
Macdonald on first looking at Pine Valley
"Constant experimentation with with bermudagrass---at one point Ross claimed that the best ground for a test plot was the front lawn of the Holly Inn---finally yielded acceptable results in 1935."
Klein's Ross book
"Just another truckload of manure, thanks".
George Crump when asked what he really wanted for Christmas.
Did any of those guys know what they were getting into and where the journey would take them and what it was going to be all about when they first got into those projects that would virtually consume them for the rest of their lives?
Not on their Lifes!!