Wayne,
What you say here is surely enough to persuade us all that we need an academically-led archive of all golf-related material (not just architecture).
There is so much information out there that is anecdotal and, at the opposite end, so much that is verifiable yet lying unrecognised or uncomprehended.
Until we start to get this information collated in one reference source (and I do not mean an exclusive collection but, rather, a central means of accessing all catalogued material) we are going to end up fighting each other about each and every received bit of information, and we are certainly going to miss the interconnections between players, officials, architects, green-keepers, writers and all others involved in laying down the huge international archive which is surely essential if the history of golf in the 19th and 20th centuries is to be recorded in a sensible and objective manner.
Basically, we who contribute to this site are all interested in golf course architecture in 101 different aspects. It's not just about re-creating dinosaurs or arguing the merits of Fazio or Doak. Our arguments may be fun, personal and (on the surface) based in scholarship. But there is so much quality knowledge out there amongst so many contributors that this is surely the place to start the business of setting up a serious database of golfing knowledge in all its different facets.
I know that I need to persuade neither you nor Tom Paul of the merits of such an initiative. It's imperative, and needs to be kick-started at exactly this moment, while scholarly enthusiasm is tempered by educated objectivity.
Just the fact that I buy a book in Barnes and Noble opposite the Lincoln Center (in the late 90s) and import it into the UK seems to confer (to my inexperienced eye) utter authority on that book about all matters relating to the hundreds of courses in the MGA. Probably most of it is correct, but if Quirin's information about Princeton is incorrect does this mean that, from this moment forth, I no longer trust Quirin, the book nor the MGA?
We need to start to get all this imformation recorded in a scholarly way which avoids the intrusions of ordinary people and mega-personalities.
What a sermon! But I hope the point has been made sufficiently for those outside the confines of this site that we must take whatever steps are necessary to ensure that courses such as Yale or St Enodoc manage to preserve thier unique qualties without opting out to the current trends.