Mike
I have no idea what point you are trying to make. First of all I have excluded all resort courses just as this list has done. Second there are plenty of high end courses on this list. So much for the idea that the list should be tailored only to the lower classes. Third, this list has courses in the resort communities of Lake Tahoe, Kauai and Pompano Beach, so I guess it is OK to have a daily fee course in a resort area. Daily-fee courses in vacation/resort areas are on an equal footing with municipal golf courses. Lastly my list is more selective and less inclusive than this one. This list includes a number of courses that were formerly private clubs. Your claim would look even more ridiculous had I opened it up to those courses.
Tom MacWood,
I somehow missed this post earlier, but I think it is an interesting one to draw distinctions, and I'd like to address each of your points if I might.
First, let me again try to define what I see as a "public course" for purposes of discussion. I would classify a public course as one that is open to the public on a pay-as-you-go basis that is not a resort or resort community, both of which have on-site lodging accommodations, often with a perm or time-share real-estate component. Ofttimes, in a resort setting, one has to stay to play, but not always.
To your first point, I don't agree that you removed all resort courses from your list. When a course like Pasadena requires funding from the adjacent hotels to even open for the year, there is a clear economic dependency. When a course like Beaver Tail is built for simply vacationing ultra-rich with places to park their yachts, or Belvedere as a mostly private club allowing play for golfer's staying at hotels in the resort town of Charlevoix, I definitely see them as falling more into the resort or resort community side of the equation.
Second, there are very few high-end courses on the Golf Digest list, even if you tried to make it appear so.
In the case of Edgewood Tahoe, I believe I was the first one to call that course into question, and speculated that it must have been because of hosting the 1980 US Public Links tournament, but that course to me is clearly in the resort mode.
However, the others you listed are not high-end at all, as they are all simply municipal golf courses in resort towns, all offering very affordable golf for the local populace as well as visitors.
Here's some websites to compare pricing, access, and most importantly, the lack of ties to either real estate development and/or lodging accommodations.
First in Hawaii;
http://www.kauai.gov/default.aspx?tabid=66Then, Pompano Beach;
http://www.mypompanobeach.org/parksrec/golf/index.htmlOr, even West Palm Beach, which is a very fine Dick Wilson design I played just by walking up and paying a very modest fee;
http://jcdsportsgroup.com/west_palm_beach/So, I'm not sure exactly what point you're trying to make about the list being "high-end", or what other courses you think fall into that category, as virtually every course on the list is a stand-alone golf course facility, mostly municipals, without either real-estate components and/or lodging accommodations.
Finally, you say that a number of these courses are public's that had formerly been private, and some of them are. But you also say that you purposefully omitted such courses from your list and that adding such would make my contention "even more ridiculous".
To that, Tom, I'd say let's list them. Please tell me the courses that were formerly private but became public before 1930 that would have been competition for my claim about Cobb's Creek, because perhaps I'm having a brain freeze but can't think of any off the top of my head. There have to be some, but right now I'm thinking there are more early public's like Salisbury Links that became private, often after the initial real-estate offerings were sold.
Jeff,
The fact that you agree that these things don't fit neatly into some broad categorization called "the Golden Age", but instead were made up of different periods, such as the earliest days, the WWI years, the roaring 20s, the crash, the depression years, etc., gives me reason to continue the discussion because I think those distinctions are fundamentally important to a true understanding of what transpired during that time. Thanks for chiming in.
Tom Paul,
I don't know...I think Tom MacWood and I are generally having a nice discussion at this point, even when we don't agree. The rest of the periodic insults flying in from left-coast-field are just the usual stuff you can find starting back on page 1 of this thread, so perhaps I've gotten used to it.
Besides, if Sir Jeffrey sees some value here, then I don't mind adding some clarifying points and detail around the courses in question.