"So you acknowledge David revised the history of Merion?"
Tom MacWood:
Definitely! I think his research first established the fact that Wilson went abroad in 1912 and that that may've been the first time. Eventually, that got me to go back to Far Hills and check those agronomy letters for a timeline of a 1912 trip and sure enough Francis wrote a letter to Oakley that Wilson had taken a 'hurried trip abroad' (at some point between March 1,1912 (which was Wilson's last letter to Oakley) and May 1,1912 which is when he sailed from Cherboroug France for the USA).
But this has nothing at all to do with the creation of Merion East and Moriarty's contention that Macdonald provided Merion with a routing for Merion East in 1910 which Wilson and committee merely CONSTRUCTED to in 1911 which is what Moriarty concludes in his essay, "The Missing Faces of Merion."
TE
This has nothing to do with the creation of Merion-East? If Wilson's trip has nothing to do with the creation of Merion why does every account written about the courses creation (in the last thirty years) mention Wilson's trip abroad in 1910 prominently?
'They dispatched young Wilson to Scotland and England to take a post-graduate course in British linksland before transforming a section of Philadelphia's Mainb Line--the long stretch of the city's social elite suburbs--into a 'golf links' no proper Philadelphian would be ashamed of.' ~~The World Atlas of Golf
'The committee decided a first-hand look at the famous courses of Britian was needed before any attempt to build a course was made. Hugh Wilson was given the honor of making the trip." ~~C&W
'In 1911 before work work on Merion started, Wilson, a relatively young Princeton graduate, was selected by the reigning junta at the club to go to Britian and see what he could learn from studying the famous courses.' ~~HWW Great Golf Courses of the World
'Hugh Wilson, chairman of the committee, was the principal arhcitect of the new course. A graduate of Princeton and crack golfer, Wilson made his living as an insurance man, but its fames as an intuitively-gifted golf course designer. The committee sent Wilson to England and Scotland to study their famous courses and he returned with a lot of drawings which the committee examined most carefully.'~~1st Merion History, Heilman
'In 1910, the Committee decided to send Hugh Wilson to Scotland and England to study their best courses and develop ideas for the new course. Before he left, he visited the siter of the NGLA, America's first modern golf course, then under construction in Southampton, NY. while there he discussed an itenerary with Charles B Macdonald, the designer of the National and winner of the first US Am in 1895. Macdonald had made a similar journey for the same purpose some eight years earlier'~~2nd Merion, History Tolhurst
'Wilson spent two solid days with C.B. MacDonald in New York in sort of a crash course in how to go about building a golf course and how to find architectural inspiration by studying golf courses and architecture in Europe. Following that Wilson then spent six months in Europe in 1910 doing just that. (Wilson's European trip preceded Geo. Crump's by a few months). In 1911 Wilson with a number of others working with him (most notably F. Pickering, W. Flynn, J. Valentine, possibly H. Toomey, A. Wilson) began constructing Merion East in 1911 and essentially had the course built by 1912 for a strictly architectural cost of $45,000. ' ~~TEP GCA 2003
'In the Wilson letter regarding the history of Merion Golf it is evident that the time from the formation of the comittee to actual construction was relatively short given Wilson's trip to Europe. He says that a committee was formed in early 1911 to construct a new golf course on the 125 acres of land that was just purchased. It goes on to say that they had a great start by visiting Macdonald for 2 days at his bungalow at NGLA where they absorbed ideas on golf course construction and prinicipals of holes in the famous courses abroad that stood the test of time. They went over the NGLA studying the holes. Then it appears that Wilson went off to Europe to study the courses discussed and recommended by Macdonald. However, it later states that after collecting information from all the local (Philly) committees and greenkeepers they begun the course construction in the Spring of 1911 and opened the course on September 14, 1912, just a year after the September 1911 seeding.'~~W. Morrisson GCA 2003
It would seem the trip was very important to the story. You appear to be doing a little revisionism yourself saying that trip has nothing to do with the creation of Merion.