Jim, the 2 Biarritz holes at the Greenbrier were true Biarritz holes not DP's - don't let my last post confuse you, please.
The Two Biarritz holes at the Greenbrier Resort:
Course #1 called the Old White:
In an article written by (famed in many circles and scorned in others) Henry J Whigham, Editor in Chief of Town and Country magazine he stated:
“Mr. C. B. Macdonald, the founder of the National Golf Links at Southampton, who is recognized as the greatest authority in the country, has kindly lent his assistance, and his advice has been carried out by Mr. Seth Raynor, who did a great deal of work on the new Piping Rock course on Long Island. As might be expected many of the holes will be reminiscent of the National and Piping Rock. The short holes, by which a golf course generally stands or falls, are all first class. They include a Redan and an Eden and a full drive hole taken from Biarritz France which has also been used at Piping Rock.”
Biarritz on the Old White Course - Hole #3:
1922 Article, American Golfer “Around the Map”:
“There are many features that betray the Macdonald touch. At the third we find the “Biarritz” hole first fashioned at the ninth at Piping Rock.”
Let me explain the early course numbers at the Greenbrier Resort
* Old White (1913-1914) was referred to as Course #1
* Lakeside a 9-hole course was referred to as Course #2 .... this course was an older short course on the property built in 1910 by Alex Findlay and was done over in 1922-23 by Raynor when he was building Course #3 (below)
* The original Greenbrier Course (1921-1922): built by Macdonald and Raynor was referred to as Course #3 but I later years this course was plowed under and replaced by Nicklaus for the Ryder Cup to be held at the resort
Biarritz on the Greenbrier Course (Course #3) Hole #10 - originally built at 220-yards:
In a 1920 Golf Illustrated writer J Lewis Brown described the 10th hole on the “new” Greenbrier Course:
“.... the tenth is a pretty one-shotter, two-hundred twenty yards as one to see. The green I built up so that it falls precipitously away on all sides, but from the front there is a good, wide run-up for the shorter player.”