Speaking of bunkers, those convex bunkers at Seaview are reminiscent of similar bunkers at GCGC.
Tom MacWood,
As I asked before, do you have any idea at what stage of construction those pictures were taken? Or the angle of the photo..is it facing the green or from the sides or rear?
I ask because I've shown that picture of the 4th bears no relation to the description of the hole from October 1914 I published.
Before you jump to conclusions here, characterizing it based on limited information and comparing it to Garden City as a purposeful design feature, I'm thinking a hint of what we're seeing might be found in Hugh Wilson's letter.
R.A. Oakley
U.S. Dept of Agriculture
Washington, D.C. Novemeber 21, 1913
Dear Mr. Oakley--
I am very much interested in the golf course at Atlantic City where five of the holes are on salt meadows. The have drained the meadows and put in a sluice gate and have pumped in sand for the formation of some of the greens. In pumping in the sand they have pumped in a great deal of mud over the marsh and made a pretty bad mess of it. They have diked the marsh and put in a sluice gate but it does not seem to dry out very well. They are anxious to get an expert to come down and go over the ground with them and tell them what they ought to do and what can be done. Is there anyone you can tell me about who really knows something of this kind of work? It is not a question of cost, as they are perfectly willing to pay them any reasonable sum for the work.
I asked them to send you some of the sod or peat by express so that you could look over it and see if it would not be very useful in treating the sandy soil as top dressing.
At present they are piling it up in mounds and covering it with lime, expecting to let it stay there all winter and then mix it up with some soil in order to sweeten it. Do you think that it will be in shape to use next spring of will it have to stand longer before the salt is out of it and it is thoroughly purified?
Very Truly Yours,
Hugh I. Wilson
As best as I can tell, Tom, this photo was taken from behind the green, with one of the rear mounds described in the hole description at an early stage of grow-in.
Here's today's hole looking from the fairway to the green. Sadly, what was described as Wilson's large fronting grassy hollow is no longer there;
Here's from behind the green looking back up the fairway out towards the bay. I'm pretty sure THIS is where the picture was taken from, roughly. If you scroll over to the right you can see some of the mounding.
Tom Paul,
I think to get to the answer to your question about Merion's bunkering, it might be useful to try and compile a listing of well-regarded inland courses in America before WWI...say, prior to 1916.
Most of those that come to mind as inland to me don't qualify because they were either built on sandy soil (i.e. Garden City, Shawnee, Pinehurst), or we already know they had pits of the more traditional sand-floored type (i.e. Oakmont, Myopia).
Perhaps it might be useful to first compile a listing of all of the best inland American golf courses in existence by 1915 as a starting point?