From Mike Cirba:-------------------------
Wow, what a US Open! Merion was amazing, and being on the grounds yesterday and walking the property in entirety twice really confirmed a lot of things for me that are sometimes difficult to see from the confines of a desk and computer screen.
I’ve been periodically checking in the ongoing Merion discussions/debates another thread and see for the most part, it seems folks there are covering the same ground we all looked at in detail many years ago. Now that some of that has bled over into this thread, I wanted to make a few related points.
I don’t intend to address all of the criticisms/disagreements with my essay because I don’t think that serves this website very well, but I’m very comfortable in my reading of the facts at hand and trust many others share my interpretation. I’m also certain that there will be a few with different opinions to which they’re entitled. If anyone has specific questions on which I based any of my assertions please let me know and I’ll do my best to answer them. Otherwise, I think the piece speaks for itself well and is bolstered with the substantial evidence provided.
Two new pieces of information did surface in recent threads, however, so the more that comes out the better off we’ll all be in understanding what happened exactly. First, I saw where Dan Hermann posted the following from the Merion Cricket Club Board Minutes the following based on Hugh Wilson’s November 1914 resignation:
“The resignation of Mr. Hugh I. Wilson, as Chairman of the Green Committee, was presented, whereupon, on motion of Mr. Lillie, duly seconded, the following resolution was adopted:
RESOLVED, that in accepting Mr. Wilson’s resignation as Chairman of the Green Committee, this Board desires to record its appreciation of the invaluable service rendered by him to the Club in the laying out and supervision of the construction of the East and West Golf Courses. The fact that these courses are freely admitted by expert players to be second to none in this country, demonstrates more fully than anything else that can be said, the ability and good judgment displayed by Mr. Wilson in his work.
The Board desires to express on behalf of the Club its sincere thanks to Mr. Wilson and its regret that pressure of business makes it necessary for him to relinquish the duties of Chairman of this important committee.
On motion duly seconded, Mr. Winthrop Sargent was appointed a member of the Golf Committee and Chairman of the Green Committee.” I hadn’t seen that before, and found it interesting that the according to the club, Hugh Wilson seems to have had the exact same role in the creation of both the East and West courses at Merion….the “laying out and supervision of the construction” of both golf courses. Now, I’ve never heard anyone challenge the fact that Wilson designed the West course so I’m not sure what makes the East different? Wouldn’t these men know very clearly what Wilson did as head of the Committee?
The other interesting tidbit that surfaced recently was an article written by Merion President Robert Lesley that appeared in the 1934 US Open program. (courtesy of Pete Trenham’s wonderful Philadelphia golf history site,
www.trenhamgolfhistory.org) Lesley was Chairman of the permanent Merion Golf Committee in 1910 and through those early years, and would have directly appointed both the permanent Chairman of the Green Committee, as well as temporary Chairman of the Construction Committee.
Lesley does not mention the contributions of Macdonald in this piece; his much earlier article on both courses in Golf Illustrated mentions the Committee, “who had as advisors…” CBM and Whigham. However, I don’t think by 1934 there was any possible confusion about the usage of the term “laid out” in the parlance of the times that clearly indicated architectural authorship.
I find the second page particularly interesting, as he talks about continuity of leadership of the Green Committee from 1909 to present, citing the Green Chairmen involved. He first lists Hugh Wilson.
A 1922 article about the changes at Merion that created today’s holes 10, 11, 12, and 13 stated that
Wilson had been Chairman of the Green Committee at Merion for 7 years, until his voluntary retirement. We know that Wilson joined Merion in 1903, and we know that after Wilson resigned from the Green Chair in 1914, with Winthrop Sargent taking over that role, and I believe Sargent served through the war and into the early 20s.
David Moriarty pointed out that in 1911 Winthrop Sargent was also Green Chairmen, overseeing the goings on at Merion’s original course in Haverford, which shouldn’t really be surprising because in January of the year Hugh Wilson had been asked to lead the new Construction Committee in charge of laying out and constructing a new golf course for the club. I would think that would be asking a lot of him to serve both roles at that point.
The timing of all of these events to me suggests that Wilson’s tenure as Green Chairman was likely from about 1906 through 1914, with a gap in 1911 and possibly 1912 while he designed and built the new course.
Because I didn’t have a second source beyond Lesley, (although Joe Valentine’s very similar 1930 article comes close}, I chose not to add this information to my IMO piece, but hope to find more conclusive info. In any case, I think there is a very high likelihood that Wilson was indeed the Chairman of the Green Committee in 1910, based on what Lesley and Valentine both reported.
If it wasn’t Hugh Wilson, perhaps someone with information in that regard could tell us who was Chairman of the Green Committee in 1909 or 1910? Isn’t it also usual for a member to serve as an associate on a Committee for some period of time before becoming Chairman? Speaking of the MCC Minutes, I think it’s a mistake we’ve all made in assuming that those Merion Cricket Club Board minutes are going to have much detailed information about golf. After studying the club structure for some time, it’s clear to me that detailed golf matters of assignments and appointment would be handled at the Golf Committee, run by Robert Lesley, with only those matters with financial or club-wide consequences rising to the level of the Board of Governors. Indeed, as seen in the oft-quoted items here, there was consideration by the Board of the whole question of the property purchase in November of 1910, and not again until April 1911 when the recommended layout plan required the purchase of an additional 3 acres beyond the 117 originally approved. This was not the 3 acres near the clubhouse that Merion rented from the railroad for the next several decades: the course that Merion originally constructed was on 120 purchased acres and 3 rented for a total of 123, yet in February of 1911 Hugh Wilson wrote Oakley that Merion had acquired 117 acres.
So, sometime between February and April the course layout required three more acres than originally thought. With fixed property borders on the east and south, it seems to me the most likely place for variation is along the west where Golf House Road is today.
Perhaps someday someone will locate the minutes of Lesley’s Golf Committee…now that would be the Holy Grail!
Another interesting thing that surface outside of GCA is that Hugh Wilson seems to have spent a heckuva lot of time playing on golf courses with quarries in play. The first course we know Wilson played was the Belmont Club, later to become Aronimink, where he was Club Champion in 1897, held the course record, was the medalist in the first Philadelphia Amateur, and served on the Match Committee at the precocious age of 18.
The course he played was designed by three members, including Dr. Harry Toulmin, who later served on Wilson’s committee at Merion. It included holes routed along the edge of a quarry, as seen in the following picture. For what it’s worth, the par four third with a creek wrapping around three sides may have given Wilson some ideas for the future, as well.
I also learned Friday from Princetonian and Springdale CC member Bill Crane that the original course at Princeton, which Wilson played during college while serving on the Green Committee when a new Willie Dunn course was being designed and constructed, had quarry crossings on four holes!
So, understanding that quarries can make such a dramatic golf feature causes me to be even more certain that there is no way in the world that CBM, Wilson, et.al, would have ever recommended original purchase of a property that purposefully and artificially truncated the Johnson Farm a mere 90 yards beyond the quarry. That’s frankly inconceivable, despite how Francis later described things.
On the grounds yesterday again, it is so apparent how the course almost erupts in width on the northern end to accommodate play in and around the quarry. It is so visually obvious to me that they couldn’t get the golf they needed/wanted there without widening that parcel, particularly with the decision to create a route around the quarry on sixteen for those folks unable to make the carry.
I notice we often hear mention of Francis saying that he swapped for land that measured 130 by 190 yards up where 15 green and 16 tee is today, which I also believe he did (widening it from about 100 yards by and shortening it from almost 300 yards it measured on the November 1910 scale map), but almost never hear Francis’s next statement, which would have been 1-4 months before Merion even owned the property if we are to accept that the Francis Swap happened before November 15th, 1910. Francis continued;
"Within a day or two, the quarryman had his drills up where the 16th green now is, and blasted the top off the hill so the green could be built as it is today." It's inconceivable to me that Merion would be up there blasting a site they didn't even own if this happened before November 15, 1910. Bad manners, at minimum!
Also, I think another big mistake we all make is assuming that Merion swapped an
equal parcel of land across Golf House Road for the additional land needed for the golf course, but Francis really doesn't say that, does he?
Perhaps someone will someday locate the topo map Wilson sent to Oakley and we'll all know for certain how the original 117 acres Wilson described in his letter to Oakley in February of 1911 were bounded. Now that would be a second Holy Grail!
As far as Jeff Silverman’s book, I’m not sure it’s available for purchase, but there is a publication available titled a “A Centennial Celebration of the East Course” and it’s very good with a lot of interesting, newly discovered information about Wilson’s family roots, and Rodman Griscom growing up playing golf at North Berwick and learning under Benny Sayers if you can procure a copy.
I’m not sure I agree with his assertion that Macdonald only considered 100 acres, but
I do think that we don’t exactly know what specific land Macdonald was considering in June 1910 other than some of the 140 acres of the Johnson Farm were included. I say that because we know from later articles that Hugh Wilson and Merion wanted to acquire land south of the original purchase, where today’s 11th green and 12th tee are located, but the club couldn’t get that deal. The Dallas Estate wasn’t purchased by HDC until a few months after Macdonald’s visit, so I’m not sure we can assume that this part of what CBM viewed. For all we know for sure, other properties that HDC had secured further west of the Johnson Farm and north of Ardmore Avenue may have been considered originally when CBM and Barker were there in June of 1910. We know that HDC that same month originally wanted to sell "100 acres, or whatever would be needed". We know the western boundaries of the golf course were still undetermined as of November 1910. I frankly don’t think its cut and dried based on the record of events or facts discovered to date.
In any case, if there are additional questions regarding the sources of any of my assertions in the essay, I’m happy to respond. Thanks again for everyone’s interest.
Cheers,
Mike