Niall,
They were reportedly playing on these early courses very soon after they were laid out. According to multiple press accounts Myopia had not been laid out as of mid-May, yet the course opened with a Bunker Hill Day tournament in mid-June. As I said, three separate accounts from around this time note that Willie Campbell laid out the course. The most detailed account of the opening (the one that lists the hole names) noted that course has only been laid out for a few days.
Campbell was at the Country Club well into May. My impression from the various newspaper accounts is that Willie Campbell laid out the course at Myopia right before the summer social season began, which was right around the first of June.
Mike Cirba wrote:
David,
I believe the totality of the Weeks account, TP's concurrence, as well as the news articles I found naming two of the men to a committee responsible for bringing golf to Myopia, as well as their status as "experts" to the locals (presumably due to prior experience on an estate course) is all indicative of their involvement in routing and staking out the original course.
In isolation, they are not conclusive but together make a compelling circumstantial case in my opinion.
Mike, aside from the bit about the estate course, you are just repeating yourself. And frankly it seems like more than a bit of alchemy to me.
You did explain your reliance on the "expert" mention, so thank you for that. Let's take another look at the June 10, 1894 blurb previewing the opening tournament which was to take place about a week later. The blurb was from a society "Gossip" column:
Bunker Hill day will be observed at the Myopia Hunt by the initial games in two newly laid out golf links. The expert players who will take part are Mr W. B. Thomas, Mr R. M. Appleton, Mr A. P. Gardner and Mr T. Watson Merrill.You had already come up with some far fetched theories based on this blurb. First you claimed that article meant that these four had played a match on the course in early June, and you speculated that it was an "exhibition match," presumably because they were experts worthy of such an exhibition. Yet it is obviously previewing the opening tournament. Next you speculated that they were playing on only two new holes, because of the mention of "two new links." Given that they played two rounds over the 9 hole course, and given it was written by a gossip columnist and not a golfer, a better explanation is that the "two new links" were her garbled way of saying they would play over
the new links twice.
Now you have really outdone yourself.
You posit that they were called
"experts to the locals (presumably because of their prior experience on an estate course.")Huh? What "prior experience on an estate course?" Given the context you must mean
design experience; after all they mostly golfed at the CC and if you don't mean design experience your reliance on this blurb makes even less sense. But apparently not even you have the chutzpah to come right out and say that you are inferring
design experience from this blurb, so you just left it vague. I don't blame you.
Could you tell us what exactly we are supposed to take from this article? And why we should rely on a Gossip columnist who apparently doesn't know much about the game? Or why the people mentioned weren't even the exact same people who were allegedly involved with the estate course, a course that may not even have existed at the time and the origins pretty fuzzy as well?
Or we could just cut to the quick and you could admit that the article indicates nothing more than: 1) These four would be playing in Bunker Hill tournament; 2) As bad as they may have been, they were among the better golfers around at the time. Excepting Campbell of course.
Likewise, the other blurb establishes nothing more than those different men were appointed with the sub-committee to bring golf to Myopia.