Mike - I don't know if this in any way connects (or addresses) your question; and I think it's probably been put on this site already by Joe B. Sorry, I don't know how to post the entire thing, or cut and paste it as the print quality is poor -- but I found it at the Library of Congress.
The December 15, 1906 edition of the New York Daily Tribue has an article with the heading: "An Ideal Golf Course - Land Has Been Bought". I don't see any mention of Raynor, but the article says in part (the opening paragraph, and then one from the middle/end):
"The "ideal golf course" begins to look like something more than a dream. After a year's study and search, Charles B. Macdonald announced last night that he had purchased 200 acres of land on the Shinnecock Hills"...."
"....A holding company has been formed consisting of Charles Blair Macdonald, president; James A. Stillman, treasurer; Robert C. Watson jr., secretary; and Devereaux Emmet and Daniel Chauncey, directors. A committee to lay out the course has also been appointed, as follows: Charles Blair Macdonald, Walter Travis, H.J. Whigham, and Devereaux Emmet. This committee has been granted three months to stake out the course. After that a plaster of paris model will be made. This model will be an exact reproduction of the proposed holes. According to Mr. Whigham, it will be possible to reproduce facsimiles of the famous "Redan" at North Berwick; the "Alps" at Prestwick; and the short hole at St. Andrews. There is also a neck calculated to present one of the best water hazards to be found anywhere...."
Actually, Mike, as I typed that out I realzied that it probably doesn't address your question at all -- but I thought it interesting nonetheless
Peter