"Tom P...
Do YOU believe that CBM was the first golf course architect?"
Mac:
Not really, but I now believe I understand much, much better why C.B. Macdonald referred to NGLA as the first example of golf course ARCHITECTURE he was aware of.
But I doubt I would ever be willing to agree with him on the beginning of the use of that term or word (golf course ARCHITECTURE) for the simple reason I just can't imagine what other term would be appropriate for all that came before NGLA!
I also believe that the very reasons he gave for considering NGLA to be the first example of golf course architecture really did create plenty of misunderstanding and perhaps dissatisfaction with future architects in America and seemingly elsewhere.
I don't think it was so much that he so strongly proposed that ARCHITECTURE (golf course) must only be the use of "time tested", traditonal holes and features and principles ("Classical") but also that Macdonald roundly and firmly condemned the entire idea of novelty and innovation in the creation of golf courses even if apparently with the use of pre-existing natural landforms used for golf essentially untouched.
I don't just think, I know, that a number of American architects took exception to that and some actually wrote about it----eg Tillinghast and Travis---and I feel that others took exception to it as well without ever really mentioning it----eg probably the likes of Wilson and Flynn or even Ross or Thomas or even the rest of all of them put together.
I just do not think that any future architect felt that kind of limited "codification" or "standardization" applied to architecture was a good or healthy thing for the artform or whatever one choosed to call it, and I think that sentiment extended from many of Macdonald's contemporaries all the way to Doak or C&C, Hanse, Fazio, Hurzdan, RTJ, Dick Wilson, Rees Jones, Kelly Blake Moran, etc, etc, et al.
I am not necessarily saying I think Macdonald's concept (copying time tested holes and features and principles from abroad) was wrong at all (I think of his copy concept of what he called "classical" from abroad was just a very interesting milestone or stepping stone along the progressing continuum of golf course architecture) only that in the over-all all that he said in that context was truly misunderstood!
And I also feel very strongly that Macdonald himself came to know it had been misunderstood and his eventual reaction to it very much showed in not just what he did in the future but also in what he said and what he wrote in the future (from NGLA), particularly in his book, "Scotland's Gift Golf."
Always in the back of my mind with Macdonald I keep thinking----what was it he apparently objected to with golf course architecture into the teens and 1920s and on to his death. It was definitely something and something significant in his mind because I'm pretty sure his famous remark---eg "it makes the very soul of golf shriek" (that was not written in 1906 as many have thought but in 1926) was not referring so much to what came BEFORE NGLA but AFTER it!!
And as a way of perhaps confirming that on the flipside I am also not aware of anyone else's architecture Macdonald actually praised other than Merion East's (before it was built) and Pine Valley's in perhaps 1913. Perhaps I'm wrong about that and the other good researchers on here can supply us with some examples of the work of others that Macdonald actually praised in the teens and 1920s.