Here's the full article that Jim Kennedy quotes in his original post on Rayner. This article was in The Otsego Farmer on Friday, November 4, 1955:
LEN RAYNER
TO RETIRE ON
0CT0BER 31
Golf Course Pro And
Superintendent
Since 1919
Leonard M. (Len) Rayner, since
April, 1919, course superintendent
and golf pro at the Cooperstown
Country Club, this week announced
his retirement effective October 31.
The popular "Len," who was born
in England in 1889, has been in indifferent
health for some time and
was hospitalized twice by a heart
condition in 1952. For the past three
years he has been acting only in a
supervisory capacity in matters connected
with the local golf course.
He said that following his resignation
he and his wife, Laura, probably
will leave for an extended stay in
Florida.- The couple's home is at 6
Pine Boulevard, this village.
Rayner's outstanding work in construction
of the Country Club's 18-
hole course came in 1919 when he
changed the location of every tee and
green with the exception of No. 2.
The building of the present 18th tee
was termed a "most remarkable feat."
"At this point in Blackbird Bay
there appeared to be no bottom to
Otsego Lake," a spokesman said.
"Rayner first formed a base with
22 junked automobiles, and "2,000
yards of rock from the cut on Fly
Creek hill were hauled in. To complete
the fill he used debris from the
old Mehodist Church site on Elm
Street and bricks and plaster from
the Fenimore Hotel which used to
stand at the corner of Main and
Chestnut Streets. This was topped off
with clinker cinders and topsoil, and
the tee remained intact until 1954
when repairs had to be made because
of damage caused by muskrats." ,
In addition to the Country Club
course, Rayner has laid out many
other courses including those at the
Sullivan County Golf Club, Liberty;
Woolfert's Roost, Albany; Windham
Country Club, Windham; Woodstock
Country Club, Woodstock, and the
second nine at the Oneonta Country
Club.
He coached the Cooperstown Central
School golf team for two years
when it was in the Southern Tier
League. The squad captured the
championship the first year and was
runner-up the following year. He
also was instructor to Miss Virginia
Guilford when she won the New
York State championship in 1941.
In 1934, Rayner established a then
world's championship by playing
eight rounds of golf, in a single day.
"I wanted to prove that golf is
truly a relaxing game, and that I
could go eight straight games even
though I was no longer a young
man," he said.
Four years later, 1938, he helped
construct now famous Doublcday
Field, traditional birthplace of baseball.
Possibly because of a sentimental
urge, he laid the last few
sods near home plate.
Rayner figures that manicuring
the local golf course involves an
annual "trip" of 10,000 miles for the
men who mow the grass. Each man
covers an average of 200 miles of
green, not including fairways and
approaches.
When asked what he intends doing
in his retirement. Rayner answered
in a single word.
"Loaf." he said.
That is a pretty solid and complete account of Len Rayner's tenure at Cooperstown/Leatherstocking. It sounds like the Cooperstown community owes a great debt to Mr. Rayner after his 36 years of service at the golf course.