Tom MacWood,
David,
I just thought that you could research Highland CC's minutes becuase they claim their course was designed by a different gentleman than you felt did the work. I find it somewhat amusing that so many clubs claim that a different person designed their course than you do.
Dan,
Could you elaborate on the identity of these "so many clubs?"
The Boston Journal apparently thought Findlay and Pickering were responsible for a course at Highland CC in 1909. I am confused as to how you could find my bringing this forward offensive or amusing or whatever you apparently find it.
Next thing you know, we'll hear that William Flynn didn't design Lancaster, Rolling Green, or Lehigh.
Why? Are there newspaper articles written around the time these courses were built that indicate that someone else designed these courses?
I'm all for getting the story right. And sometimes populist history is wrong. But this isn't the legal profession or journalism - it's historical research. And that in itself demands a certain academic acumen that you, frankly, lack right now.
For crying out loud - just be nice and let anything you feel is a sllight just run off like water on a duck's back.
All I know is that Merion is the best experience I've ever had in golf. The staff, the members, the courses, and the history are all WORLD class. They really know their place in history and are proud of their little oasis of green on the Main Line. Nobody I've ever met there was even the slightest bit elitist. They are truly role models - from the locker room attendant to the caddies to the pro to the members to the guy that runs their historical committee.
I think you may be confusing my thoughts about Merion with my thoughts about a few posters here, some of whom have little or nothing to do with the club.
My thoughts about Merion, its members, and its history are expressed in my essay. I have nothing but respect for Merion and its history. Otherwise, I would have never devoted a substantial amount of time studying it, writing about it, and even defending it. (Yes, defending it.) I don't like to publicly discuss my experiences at clubs where I have been a guest, but I will say that my experiences there have been very positive, much the same as yours. Merion deserves to know the true, accurate, and complete history of their great club and course, and my essay represents a substantial step in that direction.
I'm far from perfect and have plenty of flaws. I'm too assertive somtimes and I have a lack of tolerance for injustice.
And the slings and arrows thrown at Tom, Wayne, and Mike are not just. They're three classy guys that don't deserve it.
The words and actions of Tom, Wayne, and Mike tell a different story, but that is one that you apparently are intent on overlooking. Your admonishment of me in the same sentence you praise them says quite a lot about your perspective on this matter.
Just stop - please... Keep everything at the academic level and play nice. We don't need GCA.com, an oasis of civility, to debase into the tone of the BMW forum I look at, where people argue forever.
Love you all!
Dan, as I said above, the Boston Journal noted that Pickering and Flynn did a course for Highland Country Club in 1908. I cannot think of a more academically neutral way of saying it than that.
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Tom MacWood,
Reportedly, Highland's opening of the Findlay/Pickering course was scheduled for April 1909, so one might assume that the work was done in the fall of 1908. Is there any chance Flynn joined Pickering at Highland CC?
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"Perhaps there is a distinction between building and designing."
Mr. MacWood:
That is very possible, matter of fact it might be likely. If so, that sort of confusion was pretty common back then (thinking a constructors was the architect). The best known example might be Kittansett G.C. and that perception seemingly lasted for over 75 years until it was finally corrected by the production of Flynn's detailed design and construction plans.
Who constructed Kittansett?