David,
Was that highway there in 1906? I don't think so.
How did people get out to the Hamptons then? Fire up the Ford Mustang?
And exactly where that canal did the proposed highway not intersect and where were there less proposed lots drawn?? Why do you believe CBM was looking and making offers near the canal but reject out of hand what your articles tell you he was looking at closer to Shinnecock?
C'mon...that proposed drawing of what the development might look like had nothing to do with reality. Couldn't they have built the highway closer to the tracks had CBM purchased the land up near the water?? It wouldn't be the first highway in America to parallel railroad tracks, I'm sure.
There was a train going through the area, and a few stops about a mile apart. It was undeveloped land, although the part south of Cold Spring Lake along what is today Shinnecock Hills looks at least to have been surveyed. The plethora of empty proposed lots tells the story of how populated the area was at that time.
As far as whether CBM was looking at other properties in the area, what the heck do you think he was doing all of that time?
Here's what he wrote again, in a VERY brief summary 20 years after the fact;
There are a couple of odd things here.
First, the sale from a British company to Alvord's group (yes, which spawned the Shinnecock Hills & Peconic Bay Realty Co. as you told me) happened in the fall of 1905, a full year prior to these events.
If CBM made an offer to them a few weeks later for 120 acres near the canal, which as we've seen is RIGHT IN THE MIDDLE of what was known at the time as "Good Ground", we really don't know when it was rejected, or for that matter when he actually made the offer, but we do know at some point he made an offer and it was rejected. All we know for sure is that a few weeks after the sale to Alvord, CBM determined "we should build a course there if we could secure the land", and that his subsequent offer was rejected. at some point
CBM then went abroad for several months in the first part of 1906 to further his golf course studies, returning in June 1906.
All of the news accounts at that juncture still had CBM searching for a site for this golf course. Should I repost them??
So what was he then looking at for the next five months? I'm presuming he'd be scouring the land the Alvord just purchased...it was over 2700 acres, and much of it was already surveyed as seen, except for those wild reaches up into the northeast that "everyone thought was more or less worthless", right? He also seemed to be looking way out between Amagansett and Montauk, so he was looking at a pretty broad stretch.
It wasn't until I found the article from November 1st, 1906, right after the "inter-city" matches stating that CBM had narrowed his search down to two potential sites; one out near Montauk, and one near Good Ground, which I assumed was the canal land.
Note the article makes clear that the land was on the
western side of Shinnecock Hills.
It was only when you subsequently posted your articles from October that made very clear what the parameters of the 250 acres CBM was looking for...east was Shinnecock Hills, south was the LIRR, north was Peconic Bay, and west was the inlet between the Shinnecock Hills rail station and Good Ground, which we've clearly identified as having come further east than the canal in those days.
This isn't a difficult puzzle nor are those coordinates difficult to roughly determine.
My lord, when you posted that map yesterday you'd stretched the western boundaries of NGLA some miles not only past all of today's ebonack GC, but also past the entire Cold Spring Lake to try and get it out near that inlet. There is no way on earth those articles talking about today's golf course location would cite "Good Ground" as the location...not a chance. Furthermore, today's NGLA no more skirts the Long Island RR than Pebble Beach does.
Here is the map you drew with your attempt to make the landmarks mentioned in those articles relevant to today's course drawn in red lines. I've added blue lines that show exactly where the boundaries of NGLA end, and they are nowhere near the LIRR, much less the inlet towards Good Ground to the west. The parameters of the golf course I drew running west instead of north from the Shinnecock Inn does meet those parameters, very clearly and without stretching any points for miles as you've done here.
I've also added an orange boundary to indicate the eastern boundary of the land known as "Good Ground" at the time, and I've indicated the canal in purple.
So, based on the recent articles you and I have found from Oct/Nov 1906 we definitely have some new mysteries here and I'm not citing any of this as fact, other than what the article(s) state and trying to see where they lead;
There are a number of possibilities.
1) The articles were wrong and misreported what CBM said
2) CBM didn't feel that what might have been a public setback was something he wanted reported in detail in his book.
3) This was indeed the site closer to the canal and "Good Ground", but CBM got some details wrong in his book.
All are very possible, but one thing that seem impossible is for the land that is described in those articles to be the site of NGLA today.
If this conversation is getting you frustrated you don't need to participate.
I do appreciate you adding materials here, but when you post a map where you tell us the western boundary of NGLA is the inlet on the western end of Cold Spring Lake then I have to ask who is the intellectually disengenous one here and who is the one who is open to learning new information.
Consider there are more possibilities here David, than the paragraph or two CBM wrote in his book 20+ years later in his 70s that describe his activities over a period of years.
Thanks.
Patrick,
What about this land looks flat, boring, or uninteresting for golf purposes to you?