The first few posts after Rob Rigg's initial post about George Bahto's "The Evangelist of Golf" get into critiquing C.B. Macdonald's book "Scotland's Gift Golf."
In my opinion, Macdonald's book is actually a remarkable window for us into that world of golf he lived in and worked in back then. Unfortunately, to appreciate it fully one needs to get into those sections of his book that aren't about golf course architecture. They're about things such as the administration of the early USGA and a number of issues in that context from that time. And for most, even most of those on here who are really passionate about that time, about Macdonald and about NGLA, those other sections can be and actually are tremendously heavy sleding.
But there is an incredible tale of the tapestry of how and why American golf turned out the way it did in those sections, in my opinion. And there is an even more incredible tale of the way American golf may've turned out if C.B. Macdonald had gotten his way.
What was his way? Aaahh, that is a huge question and subject and it has a number of areas to consider that are not about golf course architecture.
Why didn't he get his way as he most likely felt he might or even should? Aaah, that's an even bigger story, in my opinion, and interestingly some of the answers to it are very much in his book but between the lines. To really tease it out, though, one needs to corroborate with other events and other people he dealt with over about 20-25 years.
The fact is, if any man probably should've been the president of the USGA and perhaps for an "ERA" or perhaps become the real "Father of American GOLF" it should've been Macdonald. But he wasn't. Why not? I think there is an enormous story in that which reflects on how American golf really did turn out and why over the years and over even the last century and more.
To understand it one needs to know more about Macdonald, the man, not just about Macdonald the golf architect. One needs to know more about his various opinions on things to do with golf other than architecture but mostly one really needs to understand the men who were there with him at that time who they were, how powerful they were in many ways and what they wanted which was, for sure, not always what Macdonald wanted or hoped for.
Personally, I think it took a real toll on Macdonald, perhaps depressing him, perhaps massively, and in a real way beginning in the late teens and into the 1920s he'd begun to withdraw from it all almost completely and he was done despite the occasional entreaties from some who really did want him to re-engage. But other than a few architectural projects in the 1920s generally with pretty much the same group of people who he knew well and who knew him well and all pretty much knew each other he was done.
It seems to me his years in golf were over then and his participation in architecture came to an end perhaps on Oct 26, 1926 in a meeting of the Green Committee of The Creek Club at the Links Club in New York City. He was 71 at that time and reading those minutes there was apparently a really big confrontation and explosion and a few weeks later Macdonald resigned from the club saying he wanted to go to his cottage in Bermuda and write a book.
That was "Scotland's Gift Golf" and it was published in 1928. For him he must have known all of it was all over then and it was the time to write his autobiography because there would really be nothing more for him to include even though he lived until 1939.