I don't know Pat;
Mike,
I'm glad that you finally admitted that you don't know.
David says the course was "largely" routed at that time.
What does that mean? Ten holes? Fifteen?
You'd have to ask David what he meant, however, I'd view the word "largely" as meaning more than 50 %.
Both articles stated that a committee to plan the course was created by Mac right after purchase and that they would be spending up to almost the next half year in their plamming of the golf course prior to any construction.
Did it ever occur to you that one article may have been a reproduction of the other and thus, equally flawed.
That wouldn't be the first time we've seen that happen, would it ?
Mike, what committee ? I don't consider Macdonald and Whigham a committee.
Co-workers ? yes, A team ? yes, but a committee, NO.
I already pointed out a major flaw in the article.
False in one, false in many ?
Why do you cling to newspaper articles ONLY when they seem to support your position even though you know they're unreliable or flat out wrong ?
As to the committee, there was no committee, it was Macdonald & Whigham, the same two who discovered the land, rode the land, discovered and identified where they would locate holes and route the golf course prior to the purchase of the land.
Patrick,
It would have been quite the trick to copy from each other because both new articles appeared in different New York City newspapers on the same day.
The committee, in case you want to remove your hands from your eyes and stop saying "it can't be, it can't be, it can't be"
for just a moment was announced by Macdonald and was made up of;
Macdonald
Whigham
Emmett
Travis
Macdonald also announced that they'd be planning the course for the next several months, with three months dedicated to the routing and planning of the holes, and two evidently to build topographically-correct plasticene models.
I'm not sure how one spends time planning an already planned course, much less for 5 months, but hey, I have to take Macdonald at his word here.
Can you or David point me to any accounts that say that Macdonald routed the course and then bought the land?
The only thing I've seen is that they rode the land on horseback for two days looking for potential natural features they could exploit successfully.
That doesn't sound anything like a routing exercise to me, much less anything like a planned course when it was purchased.
Perhaps I'm missing something you guys have quoted that is more specific?