I am pretty certain that the reality of the paper vs ground debate is somewhere firmly in the middle, not the romantic version of Old Tom carrying around some stakes, at least by 1910. CBM even mentions the need for a topo map in front of him to assess Merion's possibilities, and Wilson later refers to topographic maps, so we know they at least understood the concept of using maps for some of the work.
I agree with you that when it came to
the planning a golf course, the reality of the paper vs. ground debate is somewhere in the middle, and not carrying around stakes. As you note, CBM mentions the need for a topo with Merion, and Whigham described the Raynor/CBM relationship (after a certain point) as one in which Raynor was in the field and working up the plans,and CBM was not in the field working off those plans. [That's always been a possible irony to me about the Merion debate, where CBM visited the site twice. Given that CBM sometimes worked off a topo, I wonder if perhaps Merion got more of his
onsite attention than did one or some of his own courses?]
But unfortunately I think I need to make a semantical distinction, since this issue is is after all semantics. By my understanding of how the terms were used:
--
Planning a golf course could have been done
18 stakes on an afternoon style while the planner walks around and marks off the course on the ground, in which case it would have been done while the course was being laid out.
--
Planning a golf course could have been done by drawing that plan on a piece of paper before anything was actually marked off on the land, like HH Barker presumably did when he came up with his proposed lay out plan for Merion. Planning in this manner was not generally called
laying out the golf course because nothing was actually laid out (or marked out, or marked off, or even laid off) on the grounds.
-- I suppose also that there could be a hybrid approach, where some aspects of the course were planned by marking off the course on the ground, and some of it planned by putting a plan on paper.
-- But generally,
laying out a golf course involved laying out (or staking out, or marking out, or marking off, or laying off) the course on the ground. One could
plan the layout on paper, but only layout the course on the ground.
Let's say I had a small back yard garden.
-- I could go outside in the spring, eyeball the space, and then stake out where I wanted certain types of vegetables and plant them straight away, in which case laying out my garden would have been all I had done-- I would have planned as I laid it out.
-- Or I could sit inside and draw a diagram of the space and plan, on paper, and figure out how I want to arrange my garden before I actually do so. I could call this
a lay out plan for my garden, but I would not yet have laid out my garden, because I would not have actually arranged my garden on the ground.
I think as time went on and construction of golf courses became more elaborate, complicated and detailed, then the description of "laying out" or "marking off" or "staking out" a golf course on the ground became less meaningful and blurred at both the planning stage and the constructing stage. Laying out a golf course was sort of somewhere in the middle, and imprecise meaning followed. But in 1910 it generally still made sense that laying out involved arranging on the ground.
Perhaps overlooked in the triangle debate is the fact that if the topo maps had been available at that time, the engineers probably would have put them on the Nov 1910 map, although of that I can not be 100% certain.
I don't think I've overlooked it. I think they probably got a topo-map made straight away, and then sent it to M&W and tried to figure out a routing themselves. But unfortunately there is no proof about this one way or another (at least no proof that is being shared.) All we know for certain is that in June when CBM visited they apparently did not have one, and by February 1, 1911, they apparently had one. I've never dwelled on it in these threads because while I think it reasonable and likely that they would have had one made, I cannot prove when they actually did it.
As for the 1910 map, from the looks of it I think HDC created it, and purely for illustrative purposes, and so I don't think we can read much into the fact that it is not a topo. But again, this is speculation on my part as well as yours. (I may be wrong though, since who created this thing might be the only thing TEPaul and I agree on.)
Is it possible that a lot of things dragged for a while and then came together very, very quickly after the Dallas Estate got put in the mix in October? They ordered topo maps, began to refine the nature of the golf property, hired the surveyors to produce the approximate map, etc? And, of course, did some basic routing, with Francis having his brainstorm? Given old survey techniques, it is certainly probable that it took all of the Oct to Nov time frame to finish them, and if they just missed, the map could be approximate for that reason only.
It is possible I guess, provided that the timing was such that the Nov. 1910 map generally reflected the Francis brainstorm.
But one clarification. TEPaul and Mike admitted long ago that the MCC records indicate that the Dallas Estate was in play beginning in the summer 1910, either June or July. This new timeline trying to push the Dallas Estate toward November is fishy at best. But since the Dallas Estate deal look like it was being done on the sly, it is possible that this pushed back the date by which they could get a complete topo map created. Again, all speculation all the way around.
If it didn't start happening fast then, it certainly started happening fast in December. I once speculated that they took a break and started the committee after the holidays, but thinking about it now, I bet they took only a few days for Xmas and got back at it hard
.
Doing what? I am not so sure what they were doing
prior to the NGLA trip. True to his studious nature, Wilson started writing letters and trying to figure out how to do things that wouldn't be done for months. Pursuant to CBM's advice he contacted Piper/Oakley regarding soil issues. But even here it is not as if things were rolling along on Merion's side. When were the soil samples actually sent? I recall some weren't even sent until
after the NGLA meetings, but I can't remember off hand whether these were the first ones. Surely Wilson may have written other letters to other experts as well (including CBM) but we have no record of any of this so we are left to speculate.
What exactly did they get busy doing after Christmas? Whatever it was, we have to speculate, don't we? Because there is no proof they did anything until Wilson's February 1, 1911 letter indicating he had been in contact with CBM.