Andy
Some interesting comments from you there. In a lot of cases it is a simplification to have one course with a (Reconstructed) note and others not when on the courses he did not design from scratch they were all varying degrees of reconstruction.
Mackenzie's claim of 300 courses was upped to 400 by 1929 so thats a lot of courses he added in just 6 years! I'm not sure how to take this, whether it is a gross exagerration or a massive one or a medium one. Our spreadsheet is well over 200 courses consulted to or designed but I sincerely doubt whether we'll get anywhere close to 300 let alone 400!
Paul
I have just been in touch with Richard Latham who wrote the RCD course history book. He has confirmed to me that Mackenzie was involved in the redesign of the Ladies' Course at RCD in 1919 and visited RCD in August 1919. This is a summary of what he wrote:
Richard Latham indicates that The Ladies Committee requested permission from the Club Council to approach Mackenzie for advice on extending their 9 hole course. This request was granted and he visited in August 1919. His report was discussed at the main Council meeting on 20th September 1919 and a small committee was set up to study his proposals in depth. At a meeting on 18th October and after full consideration, it was decided that no further action should be taken until the matter of the lease for the course was resolved. To the best of his knowledge, none of his ideas were ever implemented.
He has no evidence that Mackenzie reported on the main course while he was there, so this is just conjecture. But he was there and he later claimed he gave them advice on the main course as well as the Ladies' Course. One has checked out, so the other is still a possibility.
As to Portrush, we can now place Mackenzie in Northern Ireland for work in 1919, although it appears he had visited Belfast before WW1 for Malone GC. So it is possible that on the same 1919 trip he visited Portrush, ostensibly as part of Colt Mackenzie and Alison. I've enquired with the club to see if their historian can take a look at their records.
As for Hornsea, yes its on the spreadsheet, this what I have on it so far:
Listed in AM 1923 advertisement. Moreton's Braid book suggested AM modified the original Sandy Herd layout in 1912 and Braid later altered the course again in 1924. The club website indicates the original design of the current course, which opened in 1908, was by Alex (Sandy) Herd, Open Champion 1902. In 1912, Dr. Alistair Mackenzie, the renowned golf architect from Leeds, who designed, among others, Alwoodley, Royal Melbourne, Cyprus Point, Pebble Beach and most famously the Augusta National. He made numerous recommendations for the Hornsea golf course, particularly in relation to the greens. His approach was that greens should be visible to the approaching golfer and have undulating surfaces towards the back. In 1925 James Braid, 5 times winner of the Open was asked to the course and he proposed various alterations relating to bunkering on the course.
Temple Newsam is too:
Leeds Municipal courses, listed in 1923 AM advertisement but not specifically by name. AM's article "The Growth of Golf in Leeds" (Golfing Oct 1923) indicates that the historic Temple Newsam estate was acquired by the City of Leeds from the Hon. Edward Wood. Two 18 hole courses were planned by AM, with the first open for play in July 1923 and the other Mackenzie expected to be ready for play by the "next spring", i.e. 1924. Official opening of the first course was on 20 July 1923. Second course opened in 1925, later than AM's suggestion. Both courses constructed by the unemployed under direction of BGCCC supervisors. The two courses are named the Lord Irwin Course (number 1 or top course) and the Lady Dorothy Wood Course (number 2 or bottom course), with the Lord Irwin being marginally longer.
Still more to be learned about both of these.
As for the Eden, I'm not certain where to put it at the moment, somewhere between the two categories perhaps?