Thanks for starting this link, as our summary on Pebble Beach may be on the skimpy side, and hope we did not leave anything out.
Pebble Beach – originally designed by Jack Neville & Douglas Grant circa 1919
For eight decades Pebble Beach Golf Links in Pebble Beach, CA, has hosted championship golf. It was the second golf course to be designed and built on the Monterey Peninsula. After it opened in 1919 it was modified and improved over the course of the next decade. W. Herbert Fowler is credited with converting the 18th to a par 5 hole by moving the green. Chandler Egan is credited with a significant redesign in preparation for its first national championship, the 1929 U.S. Men’s Amateur. “Egan created extensive manmade bunkers designed to look as if many greens were simply set into dunes.” {Pebble Beach Golf Links, The Official History, by Neil Hotelling, Pebble Beach Company, 1999, p.69} The major changes by Egan were new greens on almost every hole and a complete redesign of the routing of the 6th and 9th holes. {ibid pp. 70-77} The design remained substantially intact for the next 40 years. In preparation for the 1972 U.S. Open, the course underwent an extensive restoration to bring it back to its 1928 design. Over the years, the elements and maintenance practices had changed the look and feel of the course.{ibid pp. 193 –194} The most significant modification to the 1929 design was made in 1998, when construction began on a new 5th hole which was re-routed along the coast and the original 5th was soon taken out of play.