Mr. MacWood:
To depart from architecture for a moment, I’d like to get onto the subject of the golf professionals of Myopia Hunt Club. It seems the club listed and thanked in Edward Weeks’s Myopia history book the seven golf professionals they had in their 81 year golf history at Myopia from 1894 until 1975.
The current Myopia professional, Bill Saffrin, who followed John Thoren (Myopia’s seventh professional) who was still their professional in 1975 (and had been since 1948) when Edward Weeks (the editor of Town and Country magazine) published his Myopia centennial history in 1975 (a book he apparently had been researching on for perhaps 30-40 years) is an interesting story, and a remarkable American club professional and mentor as well, and he is certainly important to me, as I have known him for about thirty years (including before he succeeded John Thoren almost thirty years ago). He is also extremely interested in the entire history of Myopia and very much including its architectural history, and I consider him to be, as many others do as well, one of the few "go-to" guys at Myopia to do with their entire history, again, including their architecture.
Again, you said this on another Myopia thread Mr. MacWood:
“Campbell was the most experienced AND most active golf architect in New England in 1896. He was also the most respected professional in America in 1896, and one of the most respected in the world (Willie Dunn, Joe Lloyd and WF Davis were some of the others). The fact that Weeks was not aware Campbell was the pro at Myopia says a lot IMO. Do you know how easy it is to confirm that fact?”
If these things are true, Mr. MacWood, I can guarantee you that Myopia would very much appreciate knowing about it and having it documented because for some reason, even if their club records, including their professionals over the years, seem to be extremely well documented and internally with the club, they are not aware that Willie Campbell was ever their professional at their club.
If he was what you say he was above they would very much like to see what might confirm that he was considered to be in American and the world what you say he was, and that he was their professional, even if for a brief time in the mid-1890s.
Again, you said to me above----do I know how easy it is to confirm this fact? And I said to you that I don’t know how easy it is to confirm and that I do know from my relationship with Myopia that they don’t either.
Would we all like to know how easy it is to confirm? Of course we would and if it can be confirmed there is no doubt at all it will be very gladly added to Myopia’s history.
So how about it? Are you going to show SOMEBODY how easy it is to confirm or better yet just show somebody the solid evidence of it, because if you are contending this then obviously you must have solid information to that effect, or think that you do, right? Or are you going to continue on with this ridiculous excuse---this “Pledge” not to tell anyone anything?
If you continue to do that I’m sure even you realize, at this point, that everyone can not help but conclude that you really have nothing on this and that you just don’t want to admit that at any and all costs!
Is that what you really want? Is that the way you want to be perceived on here? I wouldn't think so!