I will try to respond to a number of questions raised above by DC participants. First, for reference the original layout of the restoration is at
https://carolinagolfclub.memberstatements.com/Clubs/CSGCarolina/Uploaded/CalendarPics/Web%20Site%20Docs/Spence%20Master%20Plan.pdf. During the restoration process two holes were changed. In the layout, the number 13 green is shown both where it was pre-restoration and as originally planned by Spence in the restoration. During the work, Spence decided the 13th green should be moved to the left, where the number 11 tees are shown. So, the no. 13 greenside and cross-fronting bunkers are now different than shown on this diagram. In turn, the number 11 tee was moved to the right of the no. 10 green, making 11 a gentle dogleg. For more restoration, go to the club website,
https://carolinagolfclub.memberstatements.com/login/login.cfm?destination, and click on
Club Info and then
Capital Updates and Docs. You view all of the documents without logging in as a member. As far as I know, the final layout of the restored course, with the in-process changes to 11 and 13, is not on the website.
Regarding the routing and hole sequencing in general, which to me means two different things, the routing is essentially the initial Ross routing with the exception of new 1 and 2, which bear the same general relationship to the rest of the course as the former 1 and 2. However, the earliest hole sequencing I am aware of is based on the fact the original clubhouse (described by old timers variously as a log cabin or barn) was just off Donald Ross Road, approximately where the on-course stone covered restroom facility is now. The holes began and finished at the club house as follows: First the "original" hole and second the current hole (same as when I joined the club 15 years ago and keeping in mind that new 1 and 2 are to the left of the driving range where pre-restoration 1 and 2 used to be). I would like to say that the current routing results from the location of the current clubhouse, which was built after the club converted from public to private in the late 1950s:
Original Ross Hole Number Current Hole Number
1 - 7
2 - 6
3 - 5
4 - 8
5 - 9
6 - 1
7 - 2
8 - 3
9 - 4
10 15
11 - 16
12 - 17
13 - 18
14 - 10
15 - 11
16 - 12
17 - 13
18 - 14
I have been told by old-timers that between these two sequences, there have been others.
From Bill McBride: "I LOVED the routing at CGC, especially the way the 15th hole is woven in between the 4th and 5th to get you headed back toward the clubhouse." Note that this is not the original Ross sequencing as explained above. The sacrifice, in the view of some (not including me), is that the movement from 4 green to 5 tee, on the far side of 15 tee, is awkward. In connection with the restoration, a process I was not actively involved with, my understanding was that various other hole sequencings were explored. Including playing what is now the back nine first, then playing number 3 (now and before) as 10, then the rest of the front nine in sequence, and finishing with new 1 as 17 and new 2 as 18. In the end, it was decided the best option was to stay with the pre-restoration sequence.
From Bill McBride: "That series of parallel holes could have been a bit boring if they each hadn't been so different in their own way." Kris Spence made then as different as he could. That is a real plus of the renovation. Pre-renovation (but probably not precisely like the original Ross holes) they were much more the same as each other.
From Bill McBride: "I admired the nest of bunkers that separated the 6th and 7th fairways and were in play on both holes, sort of like the famous Church Pew bunkers at Oakmont." Interesting how, from the 6th tee, you can see all of these bunkers and point them out to visitors, tell them that on the 7th tee they will not be able to see them, again on the 7th tee remind them that they are still there, and yet the visitors still hit into the bunkers.
I am going to resume in a separate post. I don't want to be timed out on this one. Carl