These threads have me thinking I will call Ron Whitten, since he has the most (I think) readily available data base, to see just how many courses various architects have done. That in itself would be an interesting article to many.
I personally believe that the amateur sportsman idea promoted here has been over glorified and is a small, very small, percentage of anyone whoever built golf courses.
Yes, CBM, but no to Raynor and other associates.
Thomas was probably a true rich, amateur architect
Hugh Wilson at Merion, but did he accept commissions for the few others he designed? (Mike C would know)
From the recent threads, obviously Mac did it for fees.
Tillie, I think, only took up the antique thing when his architecture fees dropped.
Ross was commercial from the get go, and spawned many associates, etc.
Bendelow was paid by Spalding, Langford, Moreau and others paid by contractors.
In fact, all the guys who really built those courses got paid.
It's sort of like a jury I once served on, where the lawyer kept asking the witnesses if they were paid to be here today....finally, the impatient judge said, (I get paid, you get paid, the witnesses get paid to be here, only the jury is required to serve for peanuts!) Look around, everyone needs to get paid, but it really shouldn't sully the craft.
Anyway, you get the idea. One thing in that generation, they probably were less likely to have working wives, which has been an aid to a modern generation of architects going out on their own, having that second paycheck while they build up their businesses. Think about that...maybe women's rights movement was a democratizing factor in getting more talent into our biz! At least it counterbalanced the modern version of rich guys getting into design....the Tour Pro.
Tom, when someone dies and makes you the King of Golf, I will quit at 50 designs for you. Until then, I trust that things will work out (for the most part) and the next generation will figure a way to enter the business and survive, without Soviet Style central planning. Frankly, I don't remember anyone purposely getting out of our way!