I’m not sure any of this is quite as mysterious as we’re making it. The timeline seems pretty clear to me.
Sometime in spring of 1913, shortly after Merion East opened for play the previous fall, construction on Seaview began. By autumn of that year, probably right after seeding, very knowledgeable Philadelphia golf writer William Evans wrote;
By the next summer of 1914 the course was opened for member play, but because owner Clarence Geist was suffering for months with a case of “the Grip”, official opening of Seaview was delayed until January 1915.
Still, that didn’t prevent early reports from surfacing.
In October 1914, an article appeared detailing the course, complete with an overview routing map and hole by hole descriptions of the golf course that Hugh Wilson designed and built for Clarence Geist.
Following is the drawing of the routing, as well as a modern aerial. The routing is exactly the same as the course that opened in 1914.
The course was pretty cool, with vast sandy stretches, as this 1920s aerial demonstrates;
Following are the hole descriptions of the Hugh Wilson design for Clarence Geist that opened in 1914. Today’s holes beginning at #9 are presently numbered differently today than they were in 1914.
Each 1914 description is followed by the modern yardage book hole description.
I’d also mention that the old photos that were posted were taken no later than January 1915. The picture of the 3rd, in my opinion, is clearly taken from behind the green, showing the mounding there (that still exists today) or the clubhouse would be easily visible in the photo.
There is no doubt that sometime around or just after the course opening that Wilfred Reid, William Connellan, and Donald Ross were all employed by Clarence Geist.
Reid was the pro and stayed on for about 9 months. Connellan was the Superintendent/Greenkeeper and was there until the fall of 1915, likely following Fred Pickering who Wilson probably used initially. Ross came in the spring of 1915 to ”stiffen” the bunkering and although his drawings and suggestions are on the display in the clubhouse, only some of this recommendations were actually followed.
It’s likely with American’s imminent involvement in WWI, as well as Geist’s dream project cost overruns (as well as his new Florida projects), the course at Seaview never changed very much from what was originally built.
I do have to wonder, if the architect involved was virtually
anyone but Hugh Wilson, with the number of different newspaper accounts pre and post-course opening crediting him and ONLY him with the design of the golf course, as well as his own letters to Piper & Oakley stating his involvement, whether we'd even be having this discussion.
I frankly can't think of many courses of this vintage with clearer documentation.