Joe et al:
I'm not sure why the 2nd hole is listed at 558 yards on that 1918 stick routing; it's actually only around 400 from that tee placement on the other side of the divide between the 1st hole and that 2nd tee. Engineer's super DonS mentioned that they may've originally had a tee on the same side of the divide as the 1st hole and if that was true the 2nd hole could've been around 550.
I suppose because the short par 3 (2 or 20) was taken out of play, at some point Frank Duane created a par 3 third hole that runs in the opposite direction of the second half of the 2nd. The original 3rd hole is now used as the second half of the 4th hole, even though it's possible to play the original 3rd from a tee a bit to the left and above the 2nd green.
2 or 20 is now back in play and the course actually has 19 holes so there are technically two ways to play the course.
I grew up within about three miles of Engineers but it wasn't until last week that I saw the course for the first time on the invitation of RobertD who's a teaching pro there. A friend of mine from The Creek Club and I got a couple of hours tour of the course from the super and afterwards we met up and had a chat about it all with Ed Gibstein, the golf chairman, a really good player I knew from my tournament days. And to think that one of my oldest and best friends in life, A.T. Gray, grew up immediately contiguous to one of the holes of Engineers and not until last week had I ever seen the place (it actually took us some time to find the driveway).
I've seen a lot of really good courses in my life and travels but I've got to say Engineers is right up there near the top in my opinion. Its greens and their "internals" (slopes and contours), sizes and angles etc are just truly remarkable and from there the beat just goes on and on and on with some "through the green" turns and deceptive visuals and fairway rolls and slopes and undulations that just seems to make strategic ramifications and consequences almost endless.
The routing, the "designing up", the architecture (greens and overall fairway and hole movement), the property's rolling, plunging topography etc, etc, adds up to making Engineers one of the coolest golf courses I've ever seen and I've seen a lot at my age and at this point. You want to talk about a true "Hidden Gem"----Engineers is it! And I should add to that opinion that because of it I think Herbert Strong had to have been something of a real architectural genius!