Hi Jeff,
Thanks for posting in this thread. I'll see if I can provide some answers...
"We'll see if Ron attends this meeting of the minds. My sense is that he does NOT read golfclubatlas.com very much. He has told me so and that he doesn't have the time. I would say he would be very pleasant to debate this with and very professional. While he is professional to a fault, he also remains very passionate about gca history too."
Jeff, I completely believe and agree with that."From time to time, some people on this site have questioned Ron's character or motivations now that he is a senior member of GD. We have to recall that he was the original golf architecture researcher, way back before the internet. I have been to his house and office. I have seen his files of clippings. I have heard his near encyclopedic knowledge and memory of the research he has done, which includes talking to many descendants of old gca's and going through their personal papers."
Jeff, I have NEVER questioned Ron's character or motivations either here or in any other venue. I don't need to be to his house to know that he must have a large and detailed archive. Yet, you also have never been to mine and are quite unaware of just how large my own archives are. For example, I have copies articles that Tilly wrote that few, if any, have ever seen today. Just three days ago I discovered a new one written in 1915 while he was in San Antonio working on Brackenridge Park & Fort Sam Hourton. It was an article about the Philadelphia baseball team! Not a word about golf was mentioned in it. My point is that my character and motivations have been questioned at times on here and elsewhere by those who have never been to my home or seen my files. A written venue in which to publish one's opinions neither makes that person more or less honorable or his writings factual. Those are shown all on their own, and Ron is a good man with a wonderful passion for the game and its history.
"Thus, I would hope any participants here do avoid personal attacks or innuendos on Ron or his character. Even if we keep this as civil as a discussion can be, the questions, if not the tone may end up similar to the Merion thread. Some of them are, IMHO:"
As long as it is left up to me that will not happen.
"Who, if any, has a bigger axe to grind in this discussion? Tillie's self appointed historian or a GD writer trying to help them sell magazines?"
I would maintain that neither of us have axes grinding away. We do have sincere belief's in what we believe are the facts surrounding the single largest individual golf course design and construction project in the history of the game. Also, EVERY person who writes a biography of a man after he has died and without ever having an opportunity to interview them is by definition self-appointed. In that sense, Ron, too, is a self-apponted historian of the game as he, too, never spoke to Joseph Burbeck.
"What record is more appropriate to rely on when two old records conflict? An actual contract for services or a newspaper article? A notice of dismissal even before the contract was finished, or Tillie's public proclamations that he was involved in one of the few great projects of the day?"
That is a question that is not applicable to this discussion. There is NO question as to the contract that Tilly signed or what was contained within its pages. That is not being questioned. The INTERPRETATION of what the contract specified upon those involved IS! It is because of how one INTERPRETS the contract's meaning that newspaper articles that include the facts of the job and information about those involved become quite important. You mentioned a "notice of dismissal" given to Tilly BEFORE the contract was fulfilled. Where have you seen this or how are you aware of it? In Ron's article he simply states that Tilly signed his contract on 12/30/1933 and "was laid off" on 4/18/1935. Not a word about a "letter of dismissal" from an UNFINISHED CONTRACT.
Jeff, let me ask you this, do you believe that Tilly hadn't spent at least 15 days at work at Bethpage in the 1 year, 3 months and 20 days that his contract was in effect? Actually, being "dismissed" at that point is something that will also be spoken to during whatever discussion will be had on the other thread. It is actually proof that he was there for MORE than 15 days as there would have been no need to provide a letter of dismissal other wise.
Finally, Tilly public proclaiming that HE was the architect of Bethpage is NOT to be given greater weight than an INTERPRETATION of what a contract MEANT more than 75 years after it was signed?
"Is there any more corroborating evidence, like Tillie's standard contract on other, full service projects?"
As for Tilly's standard contract, which was NEVER a FORM document of any type but rather conceived and written for the specific and individual project for which he was contracted to do, actually they all allowed for EXTRA SERVICES TO BE BILLED FOR as separate and distinct from the original contract. Have you considered that Tilly may have actually done so at Bethpage? But to answer your question, I have a number of copies of contracts that Tilly & clubs signed.
"Is there more substantial evidence that Tillie spent more than 15 days on site, as Phil states?" See above.
"Are there any Tillie drawn plans?" As of today there are almost NO known Bethpage plans. There is only a single set in the New York State Archive system that according to their records contain notes in hand-writing on it and at that it is not even in Albany. In fact, the place where it is supposed to be, and I will not mention it since they are a bit embarrassed at this point about it, have been searching for it since I ASKED THEM ABOUT IT in May 2002. They can't find it and due to this new article are making a vigorous and renewed search. Yet, despite that no one has seen it for many years, would you be surprised to learn that I mentioned this to ron in Email back in 2002 and he told me then that he had actually seen it? I bring that up because I am well aware that he has seen the set of prints kept by Burbeck's son and I am certain that he thought I was refering to that when I wasn't.
Actually, as history, Bethpage Park and the N.Y. State Parks & Recreation Dept. and all accounts of the day agree, Tilly designed Bethpage. Therefor, the question REALLY should be, are there any BURBECK drawn plans? The answer is NO. If there were, his SON WOULD HAVE PRODUCED THEM. He didn't and he can't.
"While I believe Ron is right about the contracts, it certainly is not out of the question that Tillie went ahead and did a lot more work than his contract actually required, because it was a great opportunity, and frankly, it was a chance to design a golf course. At the same time, Burbeck was a strong personality and had the authority to shut Tillie down if he really wanted to."
Ron is INCORRECT about the "contracts" (should be singular). From what basis do you believe that "BUrbeck was a strong personality?" You stated that Burbeck had the "Authority to shut Tillie down if he really wanted to..." No, he didn't. Tilly had an ENFORCABLE CONTRACT. Burbeck could not ignore that. If Tilly was there in addition to what the contract called for, then he MOST LIKELY had the authorization for doing so and so Burbeck could not just dismiss him out of hand. Even your own statement that tilly was given a "letter of dismissal shows that procedures had to be followed.
"I have absolutely no desire to fight about who should get credit or co-credit. I really don't care which way history records the creation of BP."
I have no desire to fight either. I, though, DO CARE about "which way history records the creation of BP" as the nmost important part of this entire discussion is the TRUTH! If history should simply record what people want to think has happened and pass that along then not a single person in any furture generation will be able to learn from it. No, History itself demands that the truth be recorded, rememberred and learned from.
"From my persepctive, it would be interesting to know more about how the two men worked together, just for historical accuracy and interest."
Actually Jeff, that is exactly WHY I am so passionate about this topic. In my original work and research that led to my first book, Golf for the People: Bethpage and the Black, I was stunned to learn about Joseph Burbeck and his singular importance to the ENTIRE project. It is because of the ENTIRETY of his repsonsibilities and the work that he was doing that it would haven been PHYSICALLY IMPOSSIBLE for him to have designed any of the courses, let alone the Black. But I'll go into great detail on that later. Suffice to say, I am of the opinion that Joe Burbeck has NEVER received his proper credit for his role at Bethpage and that Ron's original article has permanently damaged his reputation and how history will view him. That, too, is why i think it is vital that this be setteld.
"In the end, with such few facts available, we might as well agree up front that whatever comes out of this, it will still be largely an interpretation of an incomplete set of documents."
Jeff, you may want to agree with that, but I, for at least one, don't and won't. If Ron is able to convince me that i am incorrect i will gladly and proudly proclaim it, but it will not be based upon an "interpretation" that it happens. Likewise, if I maintain that it was Tilly it will also be based upon what I feel is absolute proof.
In May of 2002, from my perspective 3 things happened in this order:
1- My history of Bethpage was released by my publisher.
2- Ron & Golf Digest published the original article.
3- I received numerous calls from Architects, the management of Bethpage State Park and some from within the USGA, all asking me what information I had that would/could dispute this claim.
I didn't simply say that Ron & GD were wrong and here is what i have; rather, I went to New York the following day and spent an intensive 4 days of research at various archives and locations researching the question as one who was doing so for the first time. All the monies for this came from my own pocket. I mention that because I want you to understand the level of commitment and passion I have to the truth of history. I didn't do it because Tilly's my guy or some other nonsense as has been labelled of me, but because I simply want the truth. BOTH Tilly & Burbeck deserve it and deserve the credit for the amazing things they each accomplished.
The result of that trip? A "white paper" that is on the Tillinghast Association website (written before the Association made me their historian... that one wasn't self-appointed
... heck, I wasn't even a member of GCA nor even had heard of it at that time) and used by others mentioned above to refute their claim.
I can absolutely state without any question that there isn't another person who has researched this question more fully and at more places than myself. That fact DOESN'T mean that my conclusions are correct; it DOES give a bit more weight to them than the average fan of golf course architecture.
Finally, I'll be up in New York for the entire week and more of the Open. I have already made plans to spend a day going through documents at the Robert Moses Archives storage facility where EVERYTHING he was ever invovled with is stored away waiting to be found. As far as I know, I am the ONLY golf course historian to have done so. The full records of the Long Island State Parks Commission and the Bethpage Park Authority (the two agency's under which the park and the golf courses were built) are there. Finding them is another story entirely...