"Where did the idea of altering # 18 spring from ?
Was it internal, from within Seminole or was Wilson the person who first proposed the alteration?"
Pat:
I'll tell you the way I heard it and this goes back a long way over the years but it was a story I heard many, many years ago and sometimes in later years but I definitely do not want to get into some multi-page thread with you and others about it having to rise to some level of courtroom "proof."
But considering who the people are I've heard it from over the years it sure sounds logical and informed to me given all the circumstances or some problems apparently perceived by the club (actually you touched on potentially one of them above).
Coming out of WW2 Seminole was pretty much a mess and I guess because like many other courses it had been essentially "moth-balled" and unused during the world war years for America (1941-1945).
The job of getting it all back in order was given to Chris Dunphy or else he just took it upon himself to do it, perhaps because no one else at the club felt like doing it----eg the latter point was always part of the story too.
As I recall from the original Ross plan for the course (which I have around here somewhere but can't find right now) the practice range wasn't much and frankly it may've even been planned in the area where Hogan used to hit balls (between the 1st and 9th holes) or else that was one of perhaps two small ranges (one for #1 and one for #10. Interestingly enough Ross even designed a massive crescent shaped melded tee for #1 and #10!
The original Ross 18th green was pretty close to what they use as the range today----viz. Do you know that little chipping and pitching green they have to the right of the practice tee? I think the original Ross 18th green was right about in there.
And that might've been the real reason or one of them that they decided to get Wilson to move the 18th green left and up against the back of the dunes. In other words, that had become their basic problem to solve and in the course of it Wilson may've somewhat improved the range because when the 18th green was moved left and into the back of the dunes maybe 30-40 yards that freed up the space for a much larger practice tee, and eventually even a practice chipping/pitching/bunker practice green basically around the spot Ross's original 18th green once was. That kind of thing is not exactly in the higher reaches of GCA conceptual art and science, it is actually a pretty obvious fix for a fairly common problem.
By the way, the original tee on #18 was to the right of the 17th green. The hole was essentially straight. I think it was Wilson who put the tees to #18 to the left of #17 and up in the dunes making the hole a gentle dogleg left from a sort of dune tee to a sort of dune green.
Do you know where Dick Wilson was before the war and during the war and what he was doing during the war or would you like me to explain that to you too? It's fairly interesting and may help explain why he was brought into Seminole to bring it back right after the war.