Tom,
I'm not looking to start a Bethpage argument, just looking to clarify some facts as I have now come to appreciate them.
For the past several years I have spent considerable time in researching the origins of Bethpage and the Black. As I am certain that you will remember, last Spring you & I went at it pretty good over a number of Bethpage "facts" that were being bandied about, and things actually became quite heated and for that I apologized then and do so now.
Let me share some things with you & the others here that have been unknown to most until very recently. There can be no doubt that Tilly designed & routed the Black, and that though Burbeck oversaw the general construction from day-to-day, he didn't design it. What he DID do was the FIRST RENOVATION to the course between September of 1935 and 1938. As proof of this I offer two photographs, both aerials. One was taken in 1938 & hangs in the Bethpage clubhouse and office of Dave Catalano. Until three months ago it was the ONLY one that they were ever aware of. There actually was one taken in September of 1935 that had been lost to posterity and that they were unaware of.
There are some STRIKING differences in the course as shown in these two photos. In September of 1935, the Black course was complete and grown in, having been seeded a year late earlier that spring. The course was built EXACTLY as shown on the Park Developmental Plan that all of the powers that be at Bethpage thought was just a general plan because of how different the 1938 aerial looked. They had NO idea of the changes that were made.
Between 1935 & 1938 then, the following things were done at Bethpage Black:
1- Two long bunkers that ran up the entire right side of the fairway to the green, with the exception of a 15-20 yard area at the very corner of the dog-leg, were REMOVED and mature trees standing some 10+ feet in height were planted in there place.
2- "The waste-like bunker" (as you referred to it) on the 5th hole, DID NOT EXIST! It was NOT part of the original course construction and was NOT on the Developmental Plan. BURBECK put this in. Was it done after consulting with Tillinghast? He was on Long Island in September of 1936 and so may have advised on this aqnd other changes, but there is no proof yes or no.
3- The 2 wonderful bunkers that guard the edge of the fairway before it plunges downhill on the 6th hole were NOT there. These were added at this time also.
4- The bunker in front of the tee on the 11th hole, and the fairway portion that fronted the far right bunkers that are now 30 yards or more wide of the fairway were REMOVED at this time, with the hole now playing more straight forward as it does today.
5- A number of other small bunkers were added and removed.
For quite a while, a number of posters have bashed Rees Jones for "changing the bunkers from Tillinghast's original design." Well, unfortunately, Rees was given a copy of the 1938 aerial to work from & was told that it represented the original course. Clearly, we can now say that those at Bethpage were mistaken in this, an honest one, but a mistake none the less.
Regardless of whether one likes the finished product of Rees Jones work at Bethpage or not, he can NOT be held accountable for changing Tillinghast's bunkers. Many of these had been changed by Burbeck. In fact, a carefull analysis of what he did proves that his bunker work actually brought them back to more accurately reflect where and how Tillinghast had designed and located them.
I have gone into great detail about all of this in my coming Tillinghast biography, including the photographs that prove this. Because I gave grief to Tom in this public forum based upon some misinformation that I had been given (i.e. - that the 1938 aerial was original), I owe Tom an apology for having done so unfairly and do so now. Although I was planning to apologize to Tom a little further down the road when my bio comes out, since the issues were raised in this discussion I feel that I should not wait any longer.
If anyone would like to see this chapter, please e-mail me at philwritesbooks@aol.com & I will send it on to you.