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Few figures in the history of American golf loom so largely as Charles Blair Macdonald, the father of golf architecture and one of the chief builders of the United States Golf Association, the game's governing body in the U.S. Macdonald, whose masterpieces include the National Golf Links of America, was a fierce purist who strove to preserve -- in America -- the spirit and dignity of the game known by its Scottish forebears.
First published in 1928 as Scotland's Gift--Golf, this classic volume is arguably the most important ever written on American golf. This new edition of Scotland's Gift marks the first time in over 70 years that this classic work has been published for the general retail market. It includes over 60 illustrations, including some newly introduced vintage photos of the Chicago Golf Club and the Yale Golf Course which enrich this classic volume.
Macdonald elegantly chronicles how golf grew from a little-known Scottish oddity with a mere handful of American courses in 1890 and spread like wild fire to some 4,000 courses by 1927. And Macdonald, who designed America's first 18-hole golf course (Chicago Golf Club) witnessed and shepherded the game across critical thresholds. Having shared the links with Young and Old Tom Morris, Macdonald knew the game -- as many contended -- as it was "meant to be played": on narrow, unmanicured fairways skirted with punishing gorse and played with the gutta percha ball. He lived to see Bobby Jones master the modern era and become a national hero, solidifying golf's popularity and strength in America. Macdonald also captures the drama surrounding the U.S.G.A.'s early days, and how it unified a game once on the perilous verge of splintering into myriad forms and factions.
Macdonald also share his ground-breaking theories and insights on golf course architecture, best illustrated by his masterstrokes at the Chicago Golf Club, Yale, National Golf Links of America and Mid-Ocean in Bermuda. Indeed, Macdonald's seminal thoughts on golf course design captured in Scotland's Gift lay the very foundation of the field. Seth Raynor and Charles Banks were among his proteges.
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Add Scotland's Gift: How America Discovered Golf, Few figures in the history of American golf loom so largely as Charles Blair Macdonald, the father of golf architecture and one of the chief builders of the United States Golf Association, the game's governing body in the U.S. Macdonald, whose masterpiece, Scotland's Gift: How America Discovered Golf to your collection on WonderClub |