I can't stop thinking about the photos of the greens at no. 2 and no. 4 at ANGC.
Because both greens area in low, wooded areas, neither is easy to see from the aerials taken at the time the course opened. Thus I didn't know what these particular greens looked like until now.
No. 2 had a single front bunker, located in the center of the approach. It may be the most bizarre looking bunker I've ever seen. It was in a large U shape, with the top right corner of the U shortened slightly. The top left corner of the U went right up to the fringe of the green. There was grass in the middle of the U. Very strange. And beautiful.
No. 4 was apparently designed to have a boomerang green. A less extreme version of the original shape of no. 9 green. You wouldn't have been able to putt directly at the hole from the front edge to a pin that was back right. Amazing. (Other than having two bunkers, I don't know why MacK called it an Eden hole.)
The book also has a tantalizing ground level glimpse of the original no. 7 green, i.e., before it was set on a 20 foot pad by Maxwell. You can't see much, though.
Bob