Dr. Klein is coming to town. Good! I'll be in touch!
Everyone here seems to have some pretty good thoughts. Carl, I would agree with at least two of your points. It would seem that Bell was a pretty busy from 1925 to about 1930. When I say busy, he did a fair amount of work in that time--almost the market share in California, plus he was building not only his courses in the 1920's but Thomas' AND Watson's, as well as work for O'Neil and Croke. also. I've come across many articles where Bell would actually build a course in a rather remarkable amount of time. I'll have to dig up some articles and post them. The golf boom hit California BIG TIME. It may have been just as big per capita as the Tiger Era, maybe even bigger.
All of the other points I think are pretty spot on.
Panhandle Bill,
Recently, I was gifted a photo of the La Cumbre aerial of Thomas' course. Unfortunately I'm not at liberty to post it, but what is seen literally shakes me at my core. What they had there was amazing. including a horseshoe-shaped green that belongs in some sort of hall of fame. The hole after it, a drivable par 4 that looks to be a combination of an Alps and Riv #10. (Opps, I just broke my own rule on this thread!)
With exception to a few, very few holes, Thomas' La Cumbre is a long and distant memory, As you know, a victim of the depression, redevelopment and just urban sprawl. it sat there lying fallow up until the 50's when it was "rescued." And it was better that it was rescued then also redeveloped into houses in one of the more wonderful places to live. (as you know!)
Geoff's bunker work there came out outstanding when compared to what they had, all in the Bell spirit.