TEP -
Most of the history of gca has been written by architects. (That might be changing, but was true up until the last decade or so.) One of the curious things about that is that the architects who wrote tended to be of the strategic school persuasion. Or at least sympathetic to it. I can't think of any major exceptions. In fact, I can't think of any exceptions at all. Who am I forgetting?
Now whatever sorts of courses Taylor actually built (I've never seen one), at least at one point in his career (1910 to about 1925), he advocated for what most would call today a penal theory of architecture. It was sometimes muddled up with a bunch of other ideas, but there's not much question that for a period Taylor's sine qua non for good design was that all bad shots were to be punished immediately and hazards should be located to make that happen. He leavened that with talk about graduated penalties and proportional punishments. Mallaby-Deely (St. George's) was another architect, slightly older, who could sound very similar to Taylor. I would add Crane too, who was slightly younger, but who had some similar views.
But all that's not what I think is interesting. What is interesting is that the views of Taylor and others probably come closer to popular views about what constitutes good design than the views of the much more famous strategic architects. Yet it was the latter who wrote the histories that shaped our understandings of the history. As such, the views of Taylor and others, even though they are probably representative of the biggest slice of the golfing universe, didn't get written about very much. They are more or less minor footnotes. They are the crazy uncles that the history of gca hides in the basement.
I'm not sure where this is going. Other than to say that the written history of gca has some baked-in preferences that are rarely noticed. So I guess I'm making note of one of them.
Bob