Speaking of bunkers, here are three early photographs of bunkers at Seaview in 1914. Donald Ross was hired in 1915 to re-bunker the course.
Tom,
Darnit...I saw your message on my Blackberry and thought perhaps you found some other pictures of early Seaview than the one's I posted here about a year ago.
The only thing I'd mention is that Ross wasn't hired to "re-bunker" the course, accounts of the time state that he was hired to "stiffen" the bunkering four months after Hugh Wilson resigned as head of the Greens Committee at Merion citing the need to attend to his insurance business after spending many months designing Merion East, Merion West, Seaview, and doing revisions to North Hills and Phimont as a part-time gig.
Joe's recent article indicates that Ross left stakes about the property where he wanted bunkering added. No word on architectural drawings, differing styles, construction tips, or reconstruction of existing bunkering.
Do you even know at what stage of construction those photos were taken, Tom? They appear to be sand dumped in a mound at a place where a bunker is going to be dug to me. I can't imagine even an amateur like Wilson would design a sand pile as a hazard in windy southern Joisey and expect that it would stay in place?
This April 1914 article talks about the bunkering taking place in a year or so.
Are you sure of the timeframe of that picture of the 3rd green? I ask because the course that Wilson designed that opened for member play in early summer 1914 (the club had it's official opening in Jan 1915 - it was delayed because Geist suffered a lengthy bout of "The Grip") had this description of the hole;
Once again, it seems to me that you're trying to create an impression that isn't historically accurate with the uninformed and/or peripherally interested in an effort to further your own anti-Wilson agenda. I'm not understanding your need/desire to minimize his contributions?
I think it would be more productive to actually engage in discussion regarding his architecture, as I've tried to do with you on the Cobb's Creek thread. On this thread, Tom Paul just posted Wilson's only known writing related to an architectural topic, and I think he asked some interesting questions associated with those writings. I also offered some other questions, and I'm interested in learning more about the whole subject.
Rather than just jab/parry/counter, perhaps we could actually talk about the architecture he produced, or is it simpler to just focus on taking potshots at him trying to further some odd belief of your's that his reputation is simply due to local legend and is generally unearned?