"Tom, my commentary is not meant to take anything away from his zeal for golf in America. Obviously there is no doubt that he was beyond passionate about his beliefs where golf was concerned. The subtitle, How America Discovered Golf, is inaccurate, however. It describes his discovery more than America's."
JMorgan:
I can certainly appreciate that your commentary, and mine, on C.B Macdonald's life and times on here is nothing much more than the both of us trying to figure out as precisely as we possibly can what went on back then in numerous ways and with many people. So don't worry about anything such as over-aching argumentation between us as it is not that; this is just a discussion.
Perhaps Macdonald's take on things back then and his roll in it is somewhat skewed because he probably was a big-ego guy but I wouldn't discount what he said/wrote too much as don't forget his writing, his articles, even his bio was read by those who certainly knew him and his life and times very well and not often is it that that is some complete 180 degree turn from reality (for pretty obvious reasons
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). For that reason alone I think one can put more stock in what Macdonald himself said and chronicled than some on here may be inclined to do.
I do not know what you mean by that subtitle. Subtitle to what---his book? If so, I missed that.
I am particularly interested, these days, in Macdonald's life and times, because I am more familiar than most for sure, of who some of the people he surrounded himself with in his life in America including in golf. I find Macdonald to be a guy who certainly pushed the envelope in many ways but the thing that totally interests me is he seemed to be incredible intuitive about when and where to stop. To me that has to do with the fact that he realized, even he the over-arching ego and SOB in golf, that there were some people that no one pushed too far.
I'd be glad to name them for you and who they were, because they were within and without the USGA, the clubs he belonged to and formed. but I can tell you right now that nobody but NOBODY and certainly not Charlie Macdonald told people like some of them to f...off or just do things his way. They were bigger than he was in LIFE and by about a factor of about ten and it just fascinates me that he seemed to understand that and how to play it---which was to basically back off which is most certainly what he did over time, even if perhaps compounded because his own personal problems such as socially problematic alcoholism.
"There is an article in Golf Illustrated that details the whole Schenectady putter issue ... let me see if I can dig it up."
Thank you but I don't think that's necessary as at this point I believe I have read every single Golf Illustrated, American Golfer etc extant from that time and later.
"Without looking into Scotland's Gift, I'll guess his record was set at either Newport or Wheaton."
Excuse me, in my last post I meant to ask you Macdonald's club OF record not OR record. Before NGLA came on-stream as a club, Macdonald's club OF record was GCGC, Travis' club which he had begun to redesign before NGLA was underway or completed.