Tommy:
Show me the advertisements noting Behr at Capuchino and we can put it to bed. Offline works if that's best for you.
You said
all my postings had to be deciphered. Did the first post of this thread have to be deciphered?
How about this one:
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,66471.msg1587256.html#msg1587256I've read over 20,000 newspaper articles from prior to WW II. They got it right way more often than wrong.
What you don't understand about my work is that I don't read those articles in a vacuum. They are read against the context of all the other information I have available, including facts sourced from other newspapers, periodicals, books and the information found in the 21 different golf guides from the era.[/size]
When I found the Mackenzie/Hunter July 10, 1926 article on Capuchino back in August (and I am in no way trying to claim I was the first person to find that article), the first thing I did was see how it fit in with the information I already had on Capuchino.
There was no conflict with the Annual Guide data, which contained the following information:
1928 Guide - 1928, 18 holes, Par 72, 6,371 yards, Grass Greens, Ray De Haven as Professional.
1929 Guide - 1928, 18 holes, Par 72, 6,371 yards, Grass Greens, Ray De Haven as Professional.
1931 Guide - 1928, 18 holes, Par 72, 6,371 yards, Grass Greens, Ray De Haven as Professional.
1938 Guide - 18 holes, Wm. Goggin as Professional, noted as El Camino GC in San Bruno.
Next I checked it against the other reporting I'd seen on the construction of the course.
Feb. 9, 1926 The Times notes plans for a public course with work to start on April 1.
Aug. 10, 1926 Los Angeles Times notes start of construction of the 18 hole course.
Aug. 25, 1926 The Times notes golf course under construction.
March 12, 1927 San Francisco Examiner notes a driving competition taking place on the new course.
May 14, 1927 San Francisco Examiner notes course nearly complete with play taking place on 9 holes.
April 14, 1939 The Times notes closing of the El Camino G&CC which used to be the Capuchino club.
I spent a good bit of time looking for additional sources confirming Mackenzie and Hunter at Capuchino, and didn't come up with anything. This included examining the Mackenzie Timeline to see if the facts noted in the article jived with his whereabouts in 1927. They did.
What followed was an exhaustive search to try to find out where the Behr and Whiting attribution came from. I searched this site and your site for all mentions of the course. I searched a number of online resources for contemporaneous reports. My search came up with nothing, other than the clue that Sean Tully had been noting this as a Behr/Whiting project for quite some time, and you had followed suit. My guess (and it was only a guess) was that Sean might have seen something in Country Club magazine or another source that I couldn't find here. I reached out to Sean directly, and although he responded he didn't send on anything on Capuchino.
I also spent a good bit of time combing my files and doing research on
I did all of this before I posted the article on this site.
So how would you analyze all of the above, absent having seen anything concrete on Behr and Whiting?
If and when the facts available to me on this one change, I'll revisit my analysis.
Sven