Mike,
You have to respect a man with no shame!
I appreciate the information. It goes onto an ever-increasing list of courses and information to research... but then again, that's the fun in all of this.
Tony, you asked, "I've asked it before. Where are the architect associations in this little skit?"
What would you have them do? I can speak for the Tillinghast Association and tell you that a number of the memebrs are working very hard at researching as much as possible about every golf course that Tilly is supposed to have been associated with. Yet, and as I told Tom earlier, it is not up to us to make an "official designation" as to the architect of any particular course as if we are an official certification agency. Rather, the most we can do is express what will hopefully be, very informed opinions that clubs can use as advice.
Here are few examples of what an association such as ours comes across.
The first has taken place earlier on this thread in my discussion with Tom Macwood about Norwood. My information, which comes from scouring old golf magazines, newspaper accounts, articles written by children of past member professionals, and having personally taken photographs of the actual 1929 blueprints for the course renovation.
Tom, after I sent him an email with the photos believes that the 1929 renovation didn't take place after comparing the photo of the prints with an aerial that he has seen of the course from "sometime in the 30's."
So what is the actual stiory of Norwood? There is a lot more research that needs to take place before anything definitive can take place. If Tom is correct, then the story as has been surmised to this point (Norwood leasing from Hollywood, planned major renovation in 1919-20 curtailed because of clubhouse fire late 1919, then full-blown 1929 renovation before going out of business in late 1930's) needs revising. If it is mistaken, then proper understanding of the aerial (which I have yet to see, not Tom's fault just my lack of time) has to be furthered researched.
In either case, there are a lot of unanswered questions about a course that everyone knows that he redesigned.
Then there is the Dellwood Country Club in New City, New York. This was originally the private estate golf course that Tilly designed for Hollywood mogul, Adolf Zukor.
After he died his estate sold it and it was opened as a public course and named Muntain Farms before a group got together and leased the course and it went private, now being renamed Dellwood.
In the 1950's the club decided to renovate and redign the course including a complete re-routing plan in order to make way for a housing project. They hired RTJ Sr. who drew plans.
Up until three years ago the club believed itself to be an Tillinghast course redesigned by RTJ Sr. They were mistaken. In their archives are the plans of Tilly's design and a great deal of correspondence with RTJ SR., much of which devolved into, "Where is my money... Give me my money... I won't do anything until I get my money... I'm not doing any work for you..."
RTJ Sr. was never paid by the property owner (for some reason he was responsible because of the housing project) and never did the proposed work. The housing project never happened. Two minutes of comparing the Tilly plans and the RTJ Jr. plans to the actual golf course showed that it was as Tilly designed it (other than a grrenside bunker renovation done in the late 80's early 90's).
The club now embraces it's Tillinghast history and heritage and is now actively seeking to preserve it.
Then there is the Colonial Golf Club in Atlanta, Georgia. Construction on this course began on 10/1/1928. There are photos of Tilly with blueprints directing construction in the newspaper. Regular articles commented on construction progress, even mentioning a summer 1929 official opening. The design was over 7,000 yards in length, a monster back then. There were to be two greens for each hole; one with Bermuda grass the other with Bent. It was to be a course that they hoped would regularly host the U.S. Open. Bobby Jones was asked to be on the board of directors. They even mentioned that it was to be the first gold course in America designed without any rough.
The market crashed a few months after it opened and the bonds floated to pay for it all failed overnight and as quickly as it opened to great fanfare, it closed, the property being taken over by the city of Atlanta.
Jusat a few years later the city of Atlanta opened a municipal golf course that they called the Bobby Jones Golf Club. It was built on the EXACT site of the Colonial Golf Club.
I personally made this find just in the last two months. It leads to many exciting possibilities. Is the existing course actually the one Tilly designed? Is there any of what was built part of the BJGC? Where are the records, blueprints, etc...?
There are several people helping me research these and more as we hope to find out the story of this course that may have been one of Tilly's greatest designs and now has been completely forgotten about. So much so that even Tom Macwood, after I emailed him the information and asked if he knew of anything, was unable to find anything.
I found it by a complete accident; I was looking for information on the only couirse that anyone knew that Tilly designed in Atlanta, Ingleside. The Atlanta Journal keeps an on-line archive of its papers through June of 1929. typing in "Tillinghast" brought me to a series of articles that I never expected to see appear and that end far too soon to be able to tell the whole story.
So, in these 3 cases, what is an architectural association supposed to do? Since all of them are made up of unpaid volunteers, aren't they by nature very limited? Still, we hope to be able to find a definitive answer for Norwood and Colonial/Bobby Jones GC just as we were able to do for Dellwood.
Frankly, each of the Architectural Associations would more than welcome new members, especially those who can help in the research needed to be done. We have a very small window of opportunity to actually recreate what most of, as Mike Young likes to put it, what the "Dead Guys" did.
It is only by getting this information that heritages that need preserving can be aided in doing so.
Time to climb off my soap box.