"As you know, I've never been to Myopia, but the pictured hole seems to correspond to what is marked as the 2nd tee on the later maps. If so, then as of the 1898 Open the first tee was still not next to the clubhouse."
David:
That's correct. As of the 1898 US Open the first tee was still not next to the clubhouse. In the 1898 US Open the first tee was what is today the 2nd tee. When Leeds developed the full eighteen hole course that was used in the 1901 US Open the present first hole was in play. You can see its green in your third photograph on the preceding page (the photo caption reads "The First Green. David Brown putting").
By the way, there are some other photographs of Myopia in The Golfer of 1898. That magazine was the official publication of the USGA (and some other associations). As you know I don't know how to post photographs and such on here. Do you have access to that magazine?
Great. That is what I thought. I will take a look for the photographs later.
You wrote:
Therefore, I will explain to you where those three holes were (albeit not exactly what they were because there is no known record of what they were extant today that I’m aware of or that Weeks was aware of) that have heretofore been unaccounted for on the 1894 nine by everyone other than me (I explained this to Myopia a year or two ago).
Those three 1894 holes were almost entirely on Dr S.A. Hopkins property and they are named in that article above "Miles River," "Shooting Box," and "Track." From "Track" the next hole was "School" which is today the 8th hole and was the 2nd hole on Leeds' "Long Nine" which was used for the 1898 US Open. There were no holes in play on the Long Nine on Dr S.A. Hopkins property. The three holes that replaced those three unaccounted for holes on the original 1894 nine (Miles River, Shooting Box, Track) on the Long Nine are "Orient", "High" and "Home"----#7, #8, #9 on the Long Nine and #14, #15 and #16 on the eighteen hole course Leeds developed and was used for the 1901.TEPaul,
I still haven't seen the course. All the same, though, I don't think this is quite right. Let me suggest an alternate routing. Perhaps on opening day in 1894 the nine holes was . . .
1st. The current 2nd (kennels)
2nd. The current 3rd (Miles River)
3th. The current 4th (shooting box)
4th. The current 5th (track)
5th. The current 6th (school)
6th. The current 9th (bulrushes)
7th. From the current 10th to current 11th green. (hills)
8th. The current 12th (dale)
9th. The current 13th (pond)
In other words, I suspect that the course pretty much looped around the property to the northeast, following the 2nd through the 13th, but skipping the 7th and 8th, and cutting from the 11th tee to the eighth green.
As for the nine in use in 1898 (which I suspect had been around since 1895) I suspect that it left off the loop out on the Northeast part of the property (current 3rd-6th) and added in the current the 7th, 8th, 14th, 15th, and a longer version of the current 16th.
So the routing would have been . . .
1st. The current 2nd (kennels)
2nd. The current 8th
3th. The current 9th (bulrushes)
4th. From the current 10th to current 11th green. (alps)
5th. The current 12th (valley)
6th. The current 13th (pond)
7th. The current 14th (Orient)
8th. The current 15th (high)
9th. The current 16th (home)
Approximate of course. I came up with these for multiple reasons, but most these are based on what I've read and can glean about the holes, and from piecing together a routing that works.
Don't have time to explain now, but will try to later.