I have a fundamental question on the thoroughness and fairness of the GD research. Frankly, I perceived the article to be a classic example of "word twisting" to justify a preordained conclusion. This twisting was just brought to my attention by a member of the Tillinghast Association.
But Who am I to question the great and almighty wizard of GD?
One of the major premises to the GD/Whitten article is that the proof was there all along. That one had to merely read the Official Bethpage State Park History. I quote from GD/Whitten,
"It turns out that Burbeck is right. His father did design Bethpage Black. The evidence has always been out there, if anyone had bothered to dig for it. It's in the official history of the Long Island State Parks, published in 1959.
"The four golf courses constructed as work-relief projects were designed and constructed under the direction of Joseph H. Burbeck, the Superintendent of the park,' the book reads, 'with A. W. Tillinghast, internationally known golf architect, as consultant."
Tillinghast reduced to a consultant role? It has been easier to buy into the legend that Tillinghast sweated all the details. We all figured the Black is too good a golf course to have been designed by a nobody." -- Ron Whitten, GD, June 2002.
Well here is how the actual passage from that Official History, which by the way was published a year earlier in 1958 not 1959 as cited in GD, and which by the way is no more than a short promotional brochure piece of several pages in length.
"All five courses were designed and constructed under the direct supervision of Joseph H. Burbeck, the Superintendent of the Park, with the expert consulting service of two internationally known Golf Course architects, A.W. Tillinghast on the first four courses and Alfred H. Tull on the new fifth course."
For Pete's sake, what am I missing here. What the heck! Did GD not just make up their quote?
If so, what right does GD have to creatively revise this quote to suit their purpose? First they changed five courses to four, second they left out the word "direct" in "direct supervision," third they left out "designed and constructed ... with the expert consulting service of A.W. Tillinghast and ...," fourth they referred to Tillinghast as just a "consultant," and fifth they conveniently dropped all references to the fifth course and Alfred Tull the other expert consultant.
Perhaps I should give GD the benefit of doubt, and by some quirk of chance they got a second edition version of the Brochure printed a year later in 1959 (this is a total stretch as I understand that there was only the one version of the brochure printed a year before in 1958). Even if this was the case, the GD quote does not say that Burbeck designed the courses! All the GD quote says is that Burbeck supervised the design! Again the quote does not say Burbeck designed the courses! It says he supervised the design!!!
Well, please pardon me for I am going to get a little irreverent now. And no offense is intended.
Wasn't it in Mark Twain's "Huck Finn," where Huck said there is no point in telling small lies? If you are going to lie, you might as well tell a big lie. Geezz, a better quote may have gone,
"All five courses, the clubhouse, polo fields, sporting fields, road system, sewer system, parking lots, logo and anything else within the 1300 acres were originated, designed and constructed by Yours Truly, with just an itsy bitsy bit of help from a couple of drunk, down and out, and depressed depression consultants -- Tillie the terrible and Cliffy Wendehack -- whom by the way were really of little to no help and a general pain in _ss if and when they ever showed up for their paychecks. And twenty years later when they were gone another public works no-show job was created for the kiddie's pal, Al Tull."
Sorry guys, I lost my head for a bit.