JES and Mr. Stamm,
I've dont know either one of you and have no negative feeling about you whatsoever. If I have been insulting to either one of you personally, I apologize. Believe it or not I am discussing this stuff just because I find it interesting. But the tone has veered off track and for my role in that, I apologize.
I will try to watch my tone and address your posts as best I can, because it is obvious to me that there may be some big misunderstandings, presumably in both directions.
If you doubt my sincerity, motives, or intentions or think I am driven by some secret agenda, then I am sure my disagreeing will not change your minds. Regardless, I will read your words without preconceived notions or suspicions, and would ask you to do the same for mine. This, by the way, is probably pretty close to what I meant by generosity of spirit, above.
___________________________
JES said:
You are saying that the person, and committee, responsible for the project to research and learn about the great golf courses of the British Isles in hopes of re-creating as strong a course here in the states were so vain and self promoting that they would not recognize and pay his due one of the important individuals in the process of developing Merion East into what it was originally..a course deserving of a National Amateur Championship in its fourth or fifth year.
(my bolds)
I beg your pardon but this is not what I am saying at all. The persons involved did give credit where credit was due. They acknowledged MacDonald's influence, recognized him as an advisor, and noted his involvement, etc.
. . . didn't Wilson recognize some education and advisement CBM may have provided while in Southampton, NY prior to his trip overseas? . . . Didn't Wilson also recognize in writing that CBM saw the site and approved? This on its own is evidence that CBM got his just recognition.
I agree.
You see it as proof of a slight because why on earth would CBM show up on site and not provide as much advice as possible, right? Why on earth would a club committee and its novice architect not try to pull as much help and information as possible from the top name in the American golf world at the time? I'll tell you why. Their own ego and CBM's respect for it and of it.
I dont think Merion slighted MacDonald. At least I have not seen evidence of any such slight.
Mr. Morrison is the one slighting MacDonald. Wayne Morrison completely dismisses the notion that MacDonald had any influence at all after Wilson's pre-trip visit to NGLA. (In the past he has even denied that this trip influences Wilson!)
If the club were ever in a situation which warranted relocation and decided they would like to use me as the architect for our new golf course I would want to do it myself. I would try as best I could to pick the brain of the best, most informed people I could, but I would want me and my committee to build the course. There is a certain sense of accomplishment in actually doing something, especially something like this.
I am sure that you would also freely acknowledge any help your mentor(s) gave you and influence they had in your preparation, in your site selection, in your routing, and in whatever other areas they might have influenced you. Like Merion and Wilson did with MacDonald.
But what Mr. Morrison is trying to do is to act as if these acknowledgements were all empty and meaningless. He simply ignores them all (except for the trip to NGLA,) because proof of specific, in-the-ground influences does not (and could not ever) exist.
Based on the contemporary historical record (as you describe in-brief above) we know that there were contacts, that MacDonald had some influence, and MacDonald had some limited involvement (some sort of routing problem and also approving the site.) To deny this would be intellectually dishonest and insulting not only to MacDonald, but also to Merion and Wilson.
Yet this is exactly what Wayne Morrison is doing.
________________________
I would also expect these top experts I might consult with to respect my interests and not overstep their bounds. Have you read The Fountainhead or Atlas Shrugged?
I have read them both, but I am not sure I follow you here. Are you suggesting that MacDonald thought he should have received more credit or acknowledgement? If this is what you meant, I was not aware that this was an issue.
Now, you may very well turn and ask about the later involvement of William Flynn. My only answer right now is that he/they just changed their minds. Nothing more than that.
I am sorry, but again, I dont follow you. My understanding was that Merion was always a work in progress (as were most of the quality american courses around this time, including NGLA.)