Bret,
Some good questions and Karl and I wrestled with those and quite a few other questions over the past few weeks via email when we tried to put together all the pieces into a meaningful narrative supported by known facts.
I'm sort of replying to your commentary on both this thread and the one on Foxburg simultaneously although I will say I never gave Foxburg the type of scrutiny I did with the Dorset piece, probably because I just took the several depositions at face value, right or wrong.
But I'd like to address the piece about the USGA and holding them as the arbiter of all things golf history related in the United States. I'm not sure that John Reid and his friends playing 3 holes in a field with tin cans at St. Andrew's is all that much different than what's purported to have happened at places like Dorset and Foxburg, irrespective of year, other than it was in New York City and not some rural outpost and someone remembered to keep the minutes. The USGA and it's early history was heavily influenced by Charles B. Macdonald and he clearly had bigger visions for the game here than just localized groups of pioneers playing in their local meadows so that early organization was very CBM centric, with Chicago, St. Andrew's, Newport, The Country Club, and Shinnecock all either in major metros or rich people's getaway enclaves. I will add...and I can't emphasize this enough...they were all PRIVATE clubs, when both Dorset and Foxburg always invited outside play in the early days. This emphasis on exclusivity and golf as something "aspirational" still exists to this very day.
I'm not sure I'd make the case that early golf at Foxburg and Dorset went nowhere, either, as we have no idea what influence Fox had on his Merion Cricket Club co-members in getting golf started at that club, nor do we know any possible influence of the Dorset gang on getting Ekwanok going. Did John Reid and his fellow Apple Tree gang have any higher aspirations than just some fun recreation among themselves?
One of the tricky things (as you know) about understanding history is being able to take ourselves out of our present day understandings and try as best we can to put ourselves in their shoes, in their timeframes. In that light, it seems to me that this type of "disorganized" golf among friends is much more likely to have occurred based on someone's exposure to the game overseas (or here) well before people started thinking of forming clubs to promote the same and organize competitions. If golf is still played on those former pastures today, with or without a club formation designation I think that's pretty cool and historically noteworthy and as mentioned, I just tried to find the facts and let those facts tell the story. Does it make sense that Reid and company played golf in a field with some implements he sent for to play on a makeshift golf course and then have the foresight to create a formal organization at the end of the day?
Back to Dorset. We do know that George Harrison's father came from England, became a self-made millionaire, and at a very young age passed away leaving his estate to young George who went on numerous trips to Europe in the late 1880s and throughout the 1890s. He was a friend of Harrington's through their business, social, and sporting endeavors back in Troy and attended nearby Williams College, graduating in 1886 the year Dorset golf purportedly started. Is it any less likely that he might have been exposed and attracted to the game, perhaps procuring a few implements and showing friends the concepts and techniques of this foreign game than John Reid? Or Joseph Mickle Fox?
In both cases we're left with the words of the men (and women in the case of Foxburg) who told us the years and the people involved. In the case of Dorset, I went in with total skepticism and was continually proven wrong in my assumptions, particularly in relation to the Dorset map.
At the end of the day, I could find no believable story around the map that could explain why someone creating a fraudulent map for some type of publicity would know the various facts that we learned while investigating the property holdings, what building existed or didn't exist prior to 1896, or even who lived in a house (Mr. Frost and his Bull Pen) on land owned by others. They would have had to have been there at the time. Why would you start and end your golf course hundreds of yards from the later built clubhouse? Why would you locate your 3rd green/4th tee complex at a place that became a barn in 1896? Someone faking it years later would never have come up with that level of authenticity in a million years.
Thanks for your questions and thoughtful dialogue.