David,
Just more of your usual "I'm right and know everything and how dare you correct me and who do you think you are nonsense..."
Actually Phillip, you've got it exactly backward. Read your posts. Is it any wonder we haven't taken kindly to your latest attempts to "educate" us when they start with haughty, condescending, and false statements like:
"David and Pat, it is quite obvious that neither of you understand how the word "Highway" was used in 1906." Really? Because from where I stand it is "quite obvious" that you have
no idea what we understand, and I doubt Patrick will mind if I tell you that we'd appreciate it if you will quit pretending otherwise.
Thanks.
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Mike Cirba,
50/50? I won't even ask how you came up with that. I'd say it is much better than 50/50 but I guess the way these conversations go, 50/50 is about as close to a concession as you've ever come, and should thus be considered progress.
You asked about the November 1, 1906 articles, in particular the reference to CBM mentioning "various 'sites'" in the Shinnecock area. I don't see much mystery here, for the following reasons.
- The November 1, 1906 Sun article does not mention "various 'sites'" near Peconic and Shinnecock. It mentions two sites, Montauk (which sounds like a non-starter from CBM's description in the book and his earlier comments) and "the westerly strip of Shinnecock Hills, near Good Ground." In case there is still any confusion about whether this is the Sebonack Neck site, the Sun seems to have clarified in their December 15, 1906 article by noting"
"The location is that announced previously as the probable site. It forms part of the large tract held by the Alvord syndicate on the sand dunes between Great Peconic and Shinnecock bays." - As for the November 1, 1906 Eagle article, it doesn't mention "various 'sites'" but it does mention "various sections." Nonetheless, I have trouble seeing significance where you apparently do. Here is how the article began:
A week ago last Saturday afternoon Charles B. MacDonald, in answer to a question put to him before a crowd in the lounging room at the Garden City club house, said that he had inspected land for the ideal links project in various sections around Peconic Bay and Shinnecock Hills . Notice two things. First, his statement was past tense; "he had inspected" various sections. Second, the article only mentioned that he had
inspected. Nothing about having made multiple offers, nothing about various negotiations. Just that he had inspected various sections (not sites.)
So, his answer provided nothing to support a theory that there must have been a mystery third site. It merely stated that
sometime in the past he had inspected various sections in that area. Not really earth shattering news since we know he had previously made an offer for land by the Canal, and that he was very likely in the process of buying the present site. Those two sections constitute "various sections", don't they? Plus there was the rest of Sebonack Neck which he had the option of considering.
I think a more interesting question about these articles is why they apparently digress from the October 1906 announcement that the CBM had already purchased the land. I don't know for sure, but my guess is that the October announcement jumped the gun. Apparently, despite the October reports to the contrary, there was no formal agreement in place yet, so those October articles would have been murder for CBM's bargaining position. Viewed with this in mind, it is perhaps no big surprise that the reports a few weeks later backed well off this announcement, with the Eagle reporting what is essentially a non-answer, and the Sun throwing in another site (Montauk) and suggesting that CBM was willing to walk away from both if the price wasn't right.
It also may be worth considering that these two papers reported CBM saying two different things at about the same time, with the Eagle making no mention of Montauk or price or negotiations, and the Sun making no mention of CBM having inspected different sites around Shinnecock. Some of you seem to think CBM was a big whiz at using the press, so it perhaps isn't much of a leap to think he was doing some negotiation or at least damage control with these statements.
Before I move on to the other items in the October articles, do you understand what I am saying about these November 1, 1906 articles? Do you disagree with what I am saying? If so, why?