My home course, Tedesco in Marblehead, MA, once had 36 holes, consisting of a full 18 and two separate nines. One of theses nines was interchanged with holes from the current 18 to make an alternate 18 that was in play during our brief 36-hole period from 1931 to 1936.
One of the new holes opening for play in 1931 was a slightly uphill par three of about 180 yards that played as a dogleg in miniature, with a fairway that circumvented a vast sandy area from left to right, allowing the shorter hitter an alternative out to the left as opposed to the long carry directly over the sandy waste area. Sadly, the hole no longer exists today.
The Boston Globe wrote a near-comical promotional article about the hole just after its opening, comparing it to "the 3rd hole at the new Pebble Beach course in Del Monte, CA." There are further references to PBGL recently hosting the '29 US Amateur, the real hole at PB being "much longer" than Tedesco's par three of 180, and the natural bunkering looks similar to what I have seen and heard discussed about PB's original natural bunkering.
So, what is my question? There are no holes on the current PB course that fit the comparison, even if one of then was originally the 3rd hole. Only one current PB par three is long enough from any tee to be "much longer" than 180, #17, but I don't think this hole was ever a strategic par three curving around a hazard (although I could certainly be wrong). What DOES resemble Tedesco's short-lived par three is #16 at CPC...strategic par three curving around a hazard from left to right, much longer than 180, and the hole was in play in 1931. One might even surmise that a writer familiar with one new buzzworthy Monterey Peninsula-area course would have been familiar with the other as well. Could the article-writer a country away from CA be mixing up his courses, and be talking about CPC? Was the current #16 at CPC ever hole #3, maybe only after some holes were constructed? If the CPC theory doesn't fit, was there a PB par three that was ever #3 in the routing that could have fit the comparison?
Or was this guy just clueless and just thought the hole looked like PB and didn't know the sequencing at all?
Any ideas?? Historians unite!!