,
Derbyshire, England MacKenzie had been a member of several golf clubs near Leeds, dating as far back as the late 1890s. These included
Ilkley between 1890 and 1900 and Leeds Golf Club from 1900 to 1910. Colt visited on two occasions only: first on 31 July 1907, when he met MacKenzie for the first time, and later on 6 October 1909. On the first occasion, four months after the course opened for play, having stayed at MacKenzie's house overnight, he realized that MacKenzie's ideas were very much an extension of his own, and he gave great support for MacKenzie's ideas at the meeting with the committee. He did, however, mention the bunkering as MacKenzie's ideas had taken into account the new technology of the day, which was the Haskell wound ball (which bounced and rolled) and was now being used instead of the old
gutta-percha golf ball. Some of MacKenzie's modern ideas under discussion included undulating greens, long and narrow greens angled from the center of the fairway, fairly large and free-form bunker shapes, and substantial additional contouring. All of these remained part of his "signature style" throughout his career.
The Lido Prize served to find fresh ideas for the design of a course on Long Island, N.Y. called the
Lido Golf Club. MacKenzie then took an active interest in course improvements at his own clubs, gaining experience in the newly emerging discipline of golf course design. He charted the
Old Course at St. Andrews in great detail; by 1915 he had become a member of the
R&A. In March 1924, he produced a map which remains well-known to the present day. Following the First World War, MacKenzie left medicine and began to work instead as a golf course designer in the United Kingdom, in association with
Harry Colt and
Charles Alison in 1919, with whom he formed the London firm of Colt, MacKenzie & Alison. Four years later, MacKenzie went his own way. MacKenzie thought he had learned a lot about golf course planning from having designed camouflage. There are references to the latter in his first book on course design, called
Golf Architecture (MacKenzie 1920), such as when he writes that "there is an extraordinary resemblance between what is now known as the camouflage of military earthworks and golf-course construction", or later, when he states that there "are many other attributes in common between the successful golf architect and the camoufleur. Both, if not actually artists, must have an artistic temperament, and have had an education in science." In the same book, he also writes that "the chief object of every golf course architect worth his salt is to imitate the beauties of nature [and presumably also the hazards] so closely as to make his work indistinguishable from nature itself."
Golf Architecture featured 13 Principles, which are considered to be a timeless statement of what all golf courses should be. His book was later included in
Herbert Warren Wind's Classics of Golf Library. MacKenzie worked in an era before large scale earth moving became a major factor in golf course construction, and his designs are notable for their sensitivity to the nature of the original site. MacKenzie's second book was
The Spirit of St. Andrews. He shared his views on golf course design and sang the praises of the Old Course and other courses he admired. MacKenzie offered insights on the game and the ethos of working with the land to design strategic holes that provide "pleasurable excitement." It was written and compiled in 1933 with the help of his stepson, Tony Haddock. Champion golfer
Bobby Jones wrote the foreword to the book, which was not published during either of their lifetimes. It was thought to be lost. In 1992, golf architecture expert Ron Whitten told a small gathering at Pasatiempo about the lost manuscript. The gathering consisted of members of some courses designed by MacKenzie in the early stages of forming a Society. This initiated a search not only for the manuscript, but plans, photos, and other documentation that may be at the clubs. Tony Haddock had left many papers to his son, Raymond Haddock. Therein, the son discovered the unpublished manuscript by his step-grandfather. Haddock was able to have it edited and published by 1995, just in time for the Open Championship at St. Andrews. Haddock was involved in many book-signing events. Proceeds from book sales were donated to the Alister MacKenzie Society to establish a fund to encourage the most promising golf course architects in the world to follow MacKenzie's 13 Principles through a competition. The inaugural year of Ray Haddock
Lido Prize was 1998, and the first judges were Arnold Palmer and Ed Seay. The rules of the competition were similar to the 1914 Lido Prize competition in
Country Life.
Course chronology • 1907 –
Alwoodley Golf Club,
Leeds, England • 1909 –
Moortown Golf Club, Leeds, England • 1912 – Reddish Vale Golf Course, Stockport, England • 1913 – Castletown Golf Links, Isle of Man • 1913 – Dewsbury District Golf Club, West Yorkshire, England • 1913 – Garforth Golf Club, Leeds, England • 1913 – Hazel Grove Golf Club, Cheshire, England • 1913 – Headingley Golf Club, Leeds, England (renovations) • 1913 –
Horsforth Golf Club, Leeds, England (renovations) • 1913 – Sitwell Park Golf Club,
Rotherham, England • 1914 – Darlington Golf Club,
County Durham England (new course) • 1914 – Oakdale Golf Club, Harrogate, England • 1914 – Crosland Heath Golf Club, Linthwaite, England • 1917 – Nelson Golf Club, Nelson, Lancashire England • 1919 – Sutton Coldfield Golf Club, North Warwickshire, England • 1920 –
Bury Golf Club,
Unsworth, England • 1920 –
Felixstowe Ferry Golf Club,
Felixstowe, England • 1920 - Wetherby Golf Club, Leeds England • 1921 – Cleckheaton & District Golf Club, Bradford, England (new course) • 1921 - Walsall Golf Club, West Midlands, England • 1921 –
Fulwell Golf Club, England (renovations) • 1921 – The Portland Course at the
Royal Troon Golf Club,
Troon, Scotland • 1921 – Weston-super-Mare Golf Club,
Weston-super-Mare, England (redesign) • 1922 –
Hadley Wood Golf Course, Hadley Wood, Hertfordshire • 1922 –
Sand Moor Golf Club, Leeds, Yorkshire, England • 1922 – Stanmore Golf Club, Middlesex, England • 1922 – Pitreavie (Dunfermline) Golf Club, Fife, Scotland • 1922 – Bonnyton Golf Club,
Eaglesham, Scotland • 1922 – Campo de Golf de la Ciudad, Buenos Aires, Argentina • 1924 –
Duff House Royal Golf Club, Aberdeenshire, Scotland • 1924 – Temple Newsam Golf Club, Leeds, England • 1924 – Douglas Golf Club, Cork, Ireland • 1927 –
Cork Golf Club,
Cork, Ireland • 1924 – Muskerry Golf Club, Cork, Ireland • 1924 –
Bolton Old Links Golf Club,
Bolton, Lancashire • 1924 – Teignmouth Golf Club,
Devon, England • 1925 –
Seaton Carew Golf Club Course,
Seaton Carew, Durham County, England • 1925 – Stanley Park Golf Course,
Stanley Park,
Blackpool, England • 1925 – South Moor golf club (course re-design) • 1925 – Ravensworth Golf Club, Gateshead, England (re-design) • 1925 – Galway Golf Club, Galway, Ireland. • 1925 – Low Laithes Golf Club,
Wakefield,
Yorkshire, England • 1925 – Cavendish Golf Club,
Buxton,
Derbyshire, England • 1925 – Willingdon Golf Club, Eastbourne, England • 1925 – Rhayader Golf Club, Cwmdauddwr, Radnorshire (now Powys), Wales • 1925 – Faversham Golf Club, Kent England – redesign • 1926 –
Titirangi Golf Club,
Titirangi,
Auckland, New Zealand • 1926 –
Royal Adelaide Golf Club,
Adelaide, Australia • 1926 – The Worcestershire Golf Club, Malvern, Worcestershire, England • 1926 –
The Flinders Golf Club,
Flinders, Victoria, Australia (consultant on existing design) • 1926 –
Royal Melbourne Golf Club, Australia • 1926 –
New South Wales Golf Club, Sydney, Australia • 1926 –
Royal Queensland Golf Club, Brisbane, Australia • 1927 – Worcester Golf & Country Club, Worcester, England • 1927 –
Hazlehead Park (MacKenzie Championship Course),
Aberdeen, Scotland • 1927 –
Limerick Golf Club,
Limerick, Ireland • 1927 –
Lahinch Golf Club (Old Course), Ireland • 1927 –
Blairgowrie Golf Club (Rosemount Course),
Perth and Kinross, Scotland • 1927 – Meadow Club,
Fairfax,
California, USA • 1927 – Redlands Country Club, Redlands, California, USA • 1927 – Douglas Golf Course, Pulrose,
Isle of Man • 1928 – The Valley Club of Montecito
Santa Barbara, California, USA • 1928 –
Cypress Point Club,
Monterey Peninsula, California, USA • 1928 – Northwood Golf Club,
Monte Rio, California, USA • 1928 –
Fray Bentos Golf Club, Fray Bentos, Rio Negro, Uruguay • 1928 – Libertad Golf Club, Provincia de Buenos Aires, Argentina • 1929 – Nenagh Golf Club, Co. Tipperary, Ireland • 1929 –
Pasatiempo Golf Club,
Santa Cruz, California, USA • 1929 –
Claremont Country Club,
Oakland, California, USA • 1929 –
Crystal Downs Country Club,
Frankfort, Michigan, USA • 1930 –
Jockey Club (Buenos Aires) de San Isidro, Buenos Aires, Argentina • 1930 –
Club de Golf del Uruguay (
Punta Carretas),
Montevideo,
Uruguay • 1930 –
Green Hills Country Club,
Millbrae, California, USA • 1931 –
Bingley St Ives Golf Course,
Harden, Bingley, West Yorkshire, England • 1931 –
Ohio State University Golf Club (Scarlet Course) at
Ohio State University,
Columbus, Ohio, USA • 1931 –
St. Charles Country Club,
Winnipeg,
Manitoba; MacKenzie Nine • 1931 – University of Michigan Golf Course,
University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA • 1931 –
Royal Melbourne Golf Club (West Course),
Melbourne, Australia • 1932 –
Sharp Park Golf Course,
Pacifica, California, USA • 1932 – Haggin Oaks Golf Course,
Sacramento, California, USA • 1932 – Pontefract and District Golf Club, West Yorkshire, England which incorporated a number of classic Mackenzie greens • 1933 –
Augusta National Golf Club,
Augusta, Georgia, USA :Sources: Golf Club near Leeds, designed by MacKenzie ==As a golfer==