So I've been working on a comparison between c1930 and 1969 aerials* of Fishers Island. (Possibly a 1928 aerial but probably 1930.)
After getting past the shock of how rectilinear the course appeared in 1930, even by Raynor standards -- could this be due to Raynor's not overseeing the shaping, irrigation practices, or both? -- I was intrigued to see what appears to be a very cool-looking island tee for the 14th hole:
Anyone know the story? Photographic artifact, steady erosion, low tide in the photo, redesign, rip-rapping, what?
FYI the US Govt 1941 aerial appears to show an island tee as well, which if true eliminates the '38 hurricane. Actually, the wind would have been wrong to have caused erosion in that spot. (I think.)
*
http://golfcoursehistories.com/FI.htmlMan, if there's an architect where letting greens devolve into little ovals is really
wrong it's Raynor. Also note a lost bunker here, an added bunker there. Who dunnit?