"I am not looking for general info but rather specific info regarding the WORK that BUXTON DID at Pine Valley.
Again, Tilly wrote that, "Buxton had been one of George Crump’s most enthusiastic COWORKERS at Pine Valley..."
Phil:
I can almost guarantee you that finding the kind of detailed specific information of what a Cam Buxton did (or any other of Crump's numerous friends and sometime architect visitors to PV) that you are asking for and looking for there is just not going to happen. Why? Because things like that just were never recorded anywhere. They probably weren't even acknowledged at the very moment they happened.
Try to imagine the way it happened out there then, or almost anywhere and at any time. PV has always been known as an amazing collaborative effort of all kinds of people. In the beginning, Crump and his group of friends (mostly the same golfing buddies he played ACC with in the winter before PV) even offered to have 18 prospective members design a hole each if they contributed $1,000 for the privilege. Obviously that changed quickly and never happened as Crump swung into control of the architecture of the course on land he'd apparently paid for himself.
The only time we really get treated to the kinds of stories of some single person coming up with some brilliant SPECIFIC design ideas seems to be when some problem or obstacle crops up and it creates a real recognizable and probably somewhat ongong problem for a while (generally in a routing). This is the case with Colt and that famous story of PV's 5th (although he certainly did do more than that), or the famous story of Marion Hollins and the 16th at Cypress, Coore's story of how the 8th at Easthampton came into being or the recently reevaluated story of Richard Francis of Merion and the fitting in of the 15th green and 16th tee into an existing triangle that was too narrow by coming up with the brilliant idea to reconfigure the line of a road on a plan before the road was even built. Another famous obstacle or problem solving story to do with PV is the famous story of Tillinghast recommending to Crump to move the 13th green over to the side of a ridge perhaps 100-120 yards to the left of where Crump had the green for some time but was apparently not happy with because of the lack of conceptual satisfaction with the arrangement of the two holes that followed. Basically, that very routing glitch stuck Crump for quite some time and was probably in the main the reason PV had only 14 holes in play for so long (although obviously America's participation in WW1 for about seventeen months had something to do with it).
Other than those kinds of things the best we can ever know about any specific details at all is to depend on the general recordings of the people who were basically there throughout to observe things over time. For that one can't do much better with Pine Valley then the hole by hole recordings by Crump's really close friends Simon Carr and W.E. Smith that I refer to as "The Remembrances." The other truly valuable information, at least to me, was the basic descriptions Tillinghast provided at particular times of what had developed, what it looked like and even descriptions of how it was to play. That info from Tillie was remarkably important in constructing timelines and of course who did what or certainly who couldn't have done something simply because the timeline proved they weren't even there then.
There are all kinds of stories like those but generally it's just sort of a flow (of ideas) out there on a course like that but when all is said and done and those who participated give some one man like a Crump or a Hugh Wilson credit for the responsibility of most of it or at least for the editing of the entire process I see no reason at all why anyone today would suspect it's not true or some exaggeration or hyperbole or whatever, seemingly to create a legend via some scheme aforethought. That to me is just really bad history, really bad analysis, as well as a true failure to understand how the creation of architecture really does go day after day out there on those course sites.
I have said to someone like Tom MacWood, and perhaps others, that if these are the kinds of things they are interested in knowing they absolutely must get out there in the field on some projects and watch how it happens. They absolutely need that education because it does not happen the way most suspect apparently. If they never do that they will never have much understanding of how it happens, how it's always happened and they will never know not to ask questions like these which never are and probably never can be knowable because they were never recorded and perhaps not even really noticed at the time. Again, anyone just has to have these experiences to understand it all. Of course Mr. MacWood always seems to take umbrage at this suggestion and others seem to as well. I just don't understand why and I certainly hope you won't, Phil. I surely don't say it or mean it to be didactic, supercilious or high-handed.
Obviously people like Mr. MacWood takes umbrage if I make this kind of suggestion, these threads are replete with it and have been for years. But if he doesn't want to hear it from me or if anyone doesn't, they should simply ask the architects on here, Doak, Brauer, Cowley, Richardson, Moran etc, or the others we know of like Coore, Hanse, Wagner, Nagle etc. They will tell him and you and anyone else the very same thing because that's just the way it goes, it always has, whether one is working just on the ground or with a plan or a computer.
Crump had many friends and others out there all the time during his five years of creation and God can only know where all the ideas came from that went filtering through his head until HE (as they all have said) made the final decision to use it and do it or not.
If you ask me the man who will never get the credit for ideas at Pine Valley that he was probably responsible for is Crump's constant foreman, Jim Govan, the man they say was always by his side through the years endlessly shot testing with Crump to create, improve and finalize ideas, concepts, bunkering, greens and holes. A most interesting article in a Tennessee magazine came my way some years ago that included an interview with his son George Govan who claimed the entire idea of the basic island hole #14 was his father's idea, and to do that hole the way things were out there in that area back then compared to how it is now (with the lake) was obvioiusly not insignificant.
Has Govan ever been given credit for that generally around the world? Of course not, at least not until now.
Will people who have never been to Pine Valley, who know very little about how it went out there back then or even any idea how it pretty much always goes on the site of a project that's in the creation stage question the historical accuracy of that story of Govan and PV's #14? I have no doubt at all they will, even if I see no reason under the sun why they should or why they should even have the right to.
Most of these details are just unknowable, Phil, but I'm sure if Tillie wrote that Cameron Buxton was one of Crump's primary cooworkers out there that he very likely was that---apparently Crump had many of them, and certainly one has to include Carr and W.E. Smith who observed it all enough constantly to be asked to make those recordings and remembrances (even though, remarkably, W.E. Smith made many of his contemporneously as they were happening!). Why on earth would Tillie lie about something like that (Cameron Buxton) when the men who know the truth were still around to read it?
But what Cam Buxton was specifically responsible for, which you seem to be asking for Phil, I'm sure we will never know, particularly if someone like Tillinghast did not record it when he mentioned Cameron Buxton. Also, to me, at least, since we probably never will know specifically there is no reason whatsoever to begin to speculate now what it might have been. And certainly in addition to that, that Cam Buxton was and is being in some way minimized for something he deserves credit for!
The asking for these kinds of architectural details and who specifically was responsible for them is exactly how all these Merion threads got way off track and contentious over five years ago. Tom MacWood began a thread asking these very same things. Wayne Morrison came on with a comprehensive post saying just what I have here---eg most of them are just not knowable because they were not ever recorded or ever acknowledged---as always they are pretty much just part of the flow as it goes out there, as it always did and always will. I can find that thread from five years ago and show you what Mr. MacWood's reaction to that was and also how things began to devolve into controversy and adversity. It is still ongoing and it all started there basically with this very same kind of request!
The important thing to consider is if all those involved say that a single man such as Hugh Wilson or George Crump was in the main responsible for the filtering through of most everything and therefore in the main responsible for the architecture there is no real reason to suspect that is not true, that it's an exaggeration, hyperbole or a lie, or that credit to someone has somehow been minimized.
PS:
The other thing you asked Phil, was if Cameron Buxton may've actually fielded a shovel and began using it to actually build somethng. Again, I mean no slight to you at all, Phil, but I think you know better than to ask a question like that about someone like a Cameron Buxton, or Crump, Wilson, Macdonald, Tillie, Whigam or anyone like those kinds of cats back then. I think I can pretty much guarantee you that kind of thing certainly did not happen BACK THEN with people like that! That crowd was clearly the original magnificent "arm-wavers" of the glorious Golden Years of American golf course architecture!!