Mike Cirba,
HJW wrote about CBM 1938, but it is preposterous to read his description as saying anything about the state of the course in 1938. He was describing CBM's contribution to golf course design in America, and listed some courses CBM and/or Raynor designed. Nothing about the current state of any of the courses listed.
David,
The year was 1938.
Merion at that point had almost half the original holes wholly or partially rerouted, 5 entire holes changed, entire internal hole strategies created, new greens designed and built, and over 100 bunkers added since the course originally opened 26 years prior.
It had hosted the 1916 US Amateur, the 1924 US Amateur, and the 1930 US Am and 1934 US Open.
It was at that time probably the most famous course in America, given its greatness and Bobby Jones heroics.
CB Macdonald and HJ Whigham had spent a sum total of TWO DAYS out of EIGHT HUNDRED FIFTY TWO DAYS onsite at Merion, the first day to come and view the property Merion was considering buying and he followed with a one page feasibility report that was mostly filled with agronomic suggestions, and then returned ten months later to help the Merion Committee pick the best of five golf course plans they had created.
They never returned.
And yet, at this time...after the death of Hugh Wilson, and almost everyone associated with the opening of the course back in 1912, and now the death of his beloved father in law, HJ Whigham had the audacity to state;
"The Macdonald-Raynor courses became famous all over America. Among the most famous are Piping Rock, the Merion Cricket Club at Philadelphia, the Country Club of Saint Louis, two beautiful courses at White Sulphur, the Lido (literally poured out of the lagoon), and that equally amazing Yale course at New Haven, which was hewn out of rock and forest at the expense of some seven hundred thousand dollars. "
Don't tell us he wasn't talking about the course in the present tense. He stated that it is "AMONG THE MOST FAMOUS".
He wasn't talking about the advice they gave in 1912, or the original course as it was laid out.
He was resume-padding and epitaph-enhancing.
And he knew it.
Sorry, but that's the only explanation consistent with the facts.