David,
If you're looking to travel strictly in the black and white that's fine, just don't expect to ask for a little gray in other areas.
Jim, Wasn't this your exercise? You asked for what was inaccurate in the first paragraph of Tolhurst, so what were you expecting? What was your point if not to explore where Tolhurst got it right or wrong?
As for gray areas, sometimes one has no choice but to enter them based on an inexact or incomplete record. But where the historical record is more black and white than gray, I have trouble understanding why one would choose gray over black and white. And I don't mean Tolhurst, because I don't think he looked at most of the key stuff before he wrote what he wrote, so it was probably all pretty gray and I have no doubt he did the best he could with what he had. We have a big advantage over Tolhurst because I found the 1910 Board Report which TEPaul and cohorts had long speculated had been lost in a flood or some such natural disaster.
So please understand that I don't have it in for Tolhurst. I just think that histories ought to be set straight when new information or a better analysis comes along.
For example, of what importance is it, in the realm of discussing the creation and evolution of Merion's East course, if the MCCGA was formed in 1898 or 1909 if its primary (or probably more accurate, its exclusive) purpose from 1909 through 1913 was to facilitate the enhancement of the golf program at Merion?
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Facilitate the enhancement of the golf program at Merion? I am not sure where you got that or what it means but it seems a bit like a catch-all so broad that it would mean that just about anything said about the MCCGA was close enough so long as it had something remotely to do with golf and Merion.
Also, Tolhurst wasn't just written about Merion East, but about the history of Merion, so I am not sure I understand why you constrain the meaning of meaningful the way you do.
My problem with Tolhurst's treatment of the MCCGA is that Tolhurst seems to think it was an organization created in conjunction with the move and to facilitate the move. It wasn't. He doesn't seem to get that this was, apparently, an association of the golfers at Merion. It was not some Committee asked to facilitate the move. I understand where the confusion comes from, and it is confusing, but to me it is the sort of thing that ought to be set straight when figured out.
By the way, my paper didn't get into this at all, and I didn't go out of my way to correct every little misunderstanding about Merion's history. Even the bit about the reason for the move was relegated to a footnote. My paper focused on what I considered the bigger and more meaningful issues.
But when you asked what is wrong with Tolhurst and even break it down into little snippets, then I thought, perhaps mistakenly, that you really wanted to hear what was wrong with it.
That's why I clearly asked about "meaningful inaccuracies". Yours and David's position on this as drawing a hard line in the sand with respect to an item being fully accurate or it's deemed fully inaccurate is fine, and fair, so long as we also take that approach to the board saying Wilson and his committee designed the course with friendly assistance from CBM...
First, I think that what the board said regarding CBM was accurate. So far as I am concerned the board is on my side. I haven't seen the part about where they said Wilson designed the course. I have heard about the part where they said they gave final approval to the plan that CBM had chosen and approved.
Second, perhaps you can tell me what you think is meaningful, and then I can tell you whether it is accurate. Because I don't get it. It seems like you are putting things in there that aren't in there to come up with what is meaningful. For example where does Tolhurst ever describe the MCCGA as you described it, or where do you even get that from what Tolhurst said?
Third, see what I said about gray areas. History is full of full of them and they need to be explored and that isn't easy. But what you seem to be suggesting is that because Tom and I have found the black and white here, we are barred from exploring grey areas elsewhere. This doesn't make sense to me. Where history is black and white, I'll go with black and white and not try to substitute in my own gray. Where it is gray I will do the best I can with trying to figure it out, until something more black and white comes along.
One should never substitute their own gray in just because they prefer that history over what is written in black in white in the historical record.
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I agree Tollhurst overlooked that fact, but understand the reason. He was writing a generalized history on the occaision of the US Open coming to Merion. In polite company, and in that kind of piece, for that kind of club, it is not surprising that they focused on the postive and wouldn't want to say the club history, full of such important men, was influenced by, shall we say, humble beginnings.
But this is really at the root of all this discussion, isn't it? Merion's (or at least TEPaul's and Wayne's) desire to ignore what actually happened and instead create a "history" of what they would like to think might have happened?
Which is why I think all the emphasis on Tollhurst makes little sense, even if you are correct in the black and white sense. And, why I can understand TePaul, as part of that polite society, going all Mel Gibson on ya. In Philly circles, (or mostly anywhere) being pounded mercilessly about how you are wrong on some minor point in the overall context of things is just considered bad form. They may know you are right on this point, but it is still disconcerting.
Let me get this straight . . .
-- It is "bad form" for me to answer honestly when asked to explain the meaningful inaccuracies in Tolhurst?
-- So TEPaul's "going all Mel Gibson" on me is understandable, because he'd rather Merion's history be something other than what it was?
So much for
polite society.
Which is why one of my posts said you can be right and wrong at the same time! There are facts and there are feelings. In some cases, feelings trump. Hell, in most cases, feelings trump.
Speaking of being right and wrong at the same time, you nailed it on this one! Around here, when it comes to the history of Merion, feelings most certainly trump facts all the time. But when it comes to understanding history, should they? I don't think so.