CONTENTS

CHAPTERPAGE
I.General Principles of Economy in Course Construction and Green-keeping[17]
II.Some Further Suggestions[68]
III.Ideal Holes[88]
IV.The Future of Golf Architecture[116]

ILLUSTRATIONS

The 140-yard Short Hole at Sitwell Park[Frontispiece]
PAGE
The Sixteenth Green at Headingley, Leeds[26]
The Home Green at Sitwell Park[28]
An Artificial Hummock at Moortown, constructed from the stones removed from the Fairway[32]
The Fifteenth Hole on the City or Newcastle Course[40]
Diagram of Hole of 370 yards, illustrating the value of one bunker, B[45]
The Artificial Hummocks guarding the Fifth Green at Alwoodley[49]
The Seventeenth Green at Harrogate[52]
Grange-over-Sands: the site of one of the greens on the rocks near the boundary of the course—work just beginning[62]
Grange-over-Sands: ready for turfing—a green constructed on rocks[63]
The “Scraper” at work on Wheatley Park, Doncaster[ 69]
Grange-over-Sands: the turf cutting machine at work[70]
Grange-over-Sands: sandhills constructed by means of the Scraper on terrain originally perfectly flat[71]
An Artificial Bunker on the Fulford Course[86]
The Second Hole at Headingley[94]
The Eighth Green at Moortown[99]
The Eighth Hole, “Gibraltar,” Moortown Golf Course[101]
The Sixteenth Hole at St. Andrews[103]
The Fourteenth Hole at St. Andrews[107]
The Seventeenth Hole at St. Andrews[111]
Plan of Ideal Two-shot Hole of 420 yards[115]
The Fifth Hole at Fulford[124]

GOLF ARCHITECTURE

CHAPTER I
GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMY IN COURSE CONSTRUCTION AND GREEN-KEEPING