Go figure, but after Hugh Wilson's design at Merion opened in the fall of 1912, I guess he became sort of a local rock star! At least that's what some folks around Philadelphia will tell you, although I'm glad I'm on GolfClubAtlas and can learn the real story.
I guess I'm sort of like that lucky bloke in the grocery line who has access to "The Star", or "News of the World", or even the "New York Post", so that I can find out the REAL truth behind what those shadowy conspirators that are everywhere don't want you to know....like they're protecting us for our own good!
Well, dumb folks around here believe that after Merion opened for play, pretty soon ole' rube Hugh was hobnobbing with the well-heeled gentry and the top brass of the Golf Association of Philadelphia, including the presidents of all the top clubs who banded together during the annual January 1913 meeting to form a committee whose goal was the creation of a public golf course in Fairmount Park.
That committee formed a working committee of guys who...I don't know....who I guess some crazy folks around here thought designed and built golf courses....to try and locate suitable land in the park.
What's more amazing is that sometimes these rich guys even allowed the Wilson's and Crump's to tag along with their reindeer games!
Why, here in the spring of 1913, which is the same time the Seaview project evidently got underway, why here you have one Mr. Hugh Wilson, who evidently never designed a single hole in his life as I hear tell if one hangs around this discussion group long enough,
actually out with Clarence Geist, Ellis Gimbel, Robert Lesley, and John Pepper at a site in the Belmont section.
One account of the day even went so far as to call that Mr. Wilson an "expert", which we know had to be a misprint or another Philadelphia reporter mistake, because we've been told time and again around these parts that that was language reserved only for people (preferably non-Philadelphians) who actually designed golf courses, and at that time the only course some foolish folks thought Wilson might have created was Merion East, as Merion West wouldn't open for over another year.
Well, now that I think about it, those fallacious Philadelphia reporters actually did it again right after that. Why, now here they call BOTH Ab Smith AND Hugh Wilson "experts"!
Was this that dastardly William Evans again, or Joe Bunker, or Peter Putter, or even that Tillinghast fellow? Liars! All of 'em, I say!!
Odd local myths later stated that Hugh Wilson right around this time began working on Geist's Seaview, Gimbel's Philmont, and even worked on J. Franklin Meehan's North Hills CC, but of course, that's all just local mythology and speculation.
I'm beginning to think that perhaps Wilson merely served as a butler to these men, because they sure seemed to like having him hang around, so he must have served some useful purpose.
Why, I also hear round these parts that there must have been some feudin' and fallin' out between Geist and Wilson, so much so that ole wily Mr. Geist brought in Donald Ross to "stiffen" the trapping, because evidently some of the top players who came to the course told Mr. Geist that his original idea of a fun winter vacation resort course that wasn't too taxing actually meant that it was kind of easy for the top players, so it seems he probably had a change of heart in that respect.
But I guess these two guys were so angry at each other that when Francis Ouimet visited the course in April of 1915, the very same month Ross was hired, Geist actually paired Hugh Wilson with Francis Ouimet (certainly in a bald-faced attempt to embarrass him!
) in a match against Mr. Geist and new pro Wilfred Reid. My lord, his audacity must have known no bounds!!
Joe Bausch...if you're reading, I suggest you burn all those faulty articles by William Evans, Joe Bunker, Billy Bunker, Peter Putter, and other local writers who credited Hugh Wilson with Seaview's design.
Most suspicious are those like this July 1914 one from the Philadelphia Record where the author is NOT EVEN NAMED, and yet credits Hugh Wilson...it was a conspiracy, I Tell You!!
And now, thanks to reading my GolfClubAtlas religiously, I suspect that amateur Hugh Wilson was actually "on the take" with Mr. Geist, if you get my giest...er...gist.
You gotta wonder what a poor rube like Hugh Wilson ever did to deserve all of this?
Tom MacWood,
Et Tu, to William Evans?
He wrote in depth for a long time on the Philadelphia golf scene and was good friends with all of the prominent players and officials. Is there anyone in the Philadelphia region, past or present, who you won't try to throw under the bus in your odd, ongoing quest?
Here...I dug up the original article that I culled that specific section from as you requested...start picking!
It appears construction started in June of 1913 (presumably the plans were drawn just prior) and it wasn't until October 1913, a full four months later after construction was completed that Hugh Wilson's name was mentioned in any newspaper we've been able to find as the person responsible for the layout. Of course, no other news articles prior or post mentioned anyone BUT Hugh Wilson, but that shouldn't matter, right?
Which begs the question; if Wilson came on board in October 1913 after the course had already been designed, constructed, and seeded, what exactly did he do?
I'm beginning to see a pattern.