Scott,
Two thoughts:
1. When I read of the changes I first went to the table in the back of your book to put them in context. I read that the 11th green was relaid in 1904 or around there (don't have book to hand) and that pretty much was it. From then on I described the flattening of the 11th green as the first purposeful recorded change to the contours of that green. 'Purposeful' because contours change due to erosion, top dressing, sand being propelled out of bunkers by golfers etc etc.
There is a huge difference between, on the one hand, relaying / returfing a green -- which probably did involve some sort of change to the contours -- performing maintenance, and things occurring that we might call 'ordinary evolution', versus, on the other hand, taking shovels to the green and scooping out ground for a specific, well-defined purpose.
And maybe Old Tom did change the contours. But there's no defined record of what he might have done—more importantly, there is a huge difference between Old Tom Morris operating in situ (with no 'golf world' or body of architecture knowledge extant -- all of that off in the future, waiting to grow and to evolve, in no small part because of OTM's actions), pouring 'saund' on that green and digging the first golf cup—versus cutting it open 100+ years later. OTM: the creator, in the act of creating something whose ultimate value and meaning was in the future and at a time when, to paraphrase Mackenzie writing in 'Golf Architecture', nobody knew nothing from nothing.
It's one thing for Paleolithic Man to work and rework his wall in the Lascaux caves; it's another thing entirely for one of us to rework it today.
And it wasn't a nonfunctioning relic; that green 'worked.' When I read your account of their finding a 'dark layer' upon digging out the green's contour, my heart sank. Didn't yours, too, even just a little? It felt like someone was tearing apart a very old yet functioning watch to discover its inner workings, its second hand's smooth sweep stilled forever.
And let's remember: the justification for flattening a portion of the 11th green wasn't soil compaction, foot traffic, or agronomical failure. No, it was the desire to serve the needs of less than 0.1% of the golfing population—and the powers that be chose to do that in the most-invasive way, even though other options (including 'do nothing') were available.
2. Peter Dawson continues to define opposition in terms favorable to his position. He avails himself of every opportunity to characterize those opposed to some of his changes as 'hysterics' and as believers that TOC has never changed.
This strawman argument is very favorable to him. It is in his interest to continually advance the 'change is change' argument, the notion that we judge change by the pound not by the quality. This campaign is being carried out to win over ordinary club members after the fact of his actions. For example, a 1946 aerial is being displayed in clubhouses to show that 'change is change.' Bunkers are rough-edged, conditioning is different, green outlines vary from today, a bunker here and there do not exist or have come into existence, etc. Additionally, mention is made of this or that bunker being added / removed in 1890, etc.
Placing the changes in historical context undercuts Dawson's arguments and so, sadly, I expect we will continue to see him characterize the opposition as being in thrall, in some sort of 'hysteria' fighting his efforts to rebuild the Road Hole bunker (who cares). Additionally, I do not expect to see him place the changes in a robust historical frame. Rather, he will continue to use the language of condescension and patronization; to wit:
* we know the history better than anyone else;
* the current changes are to restore the course to its historic function;
* the current changes are to bring the course back to the way it was intended to play.
Mark