MikeC:
According to a one page club history Paxon Hollow was considerably changed after Marple Township bought the club in 1967. Jim Blaukovitch has done work at Paxon Hollow.
In 1948 the course and club was purchased and reformed as White Manor when some architectural work on the course was apparently done. In 1962 the club sold the course to a Mr Bodek and moved to their present William Gordon course in Willistown. It would not surprise me if Gordon did some work on Paxon Hollow for White Manor when they were there, as Gordon was certainly coming into his own around here following Flynn's death in 1945. Gordon was also the orginator of the PPGA (Philadelpha Public Golf Association).
Bodek operated the club as a pay-as-you-play club until selling to Marple Township in 1967.
The interesting thing to me is the one page history of Paxon Hollow says the course was designed by Francis B. Warner and built by Franklin Meehan and his son in law Ralph Raynor around 1926-28. The one page Paxon Hollow history also mentions Francis Warner designed Philadelphia Cricket Club's Flourtown course as well as Cobbs Creek.
Francis B. Warner is not unfamiliar to me but he certainly is as a golf course designer. Warner was a long time Secretary/Treasurer of the Golf Association of Philadelphia.
The Flourtown course (FKA Philadelphia Cricket Club (Flourtown)) has some attribution to Ross and Maxwell but apparently as redesigners. And what about the Cobbs Creek attribution to Warner? Interesting!
Francis Warner (everytime someone mentions or writes about Warner they seem to use a different middle initial but I know its the same man) then obviously designed Paxon Hollow and perhaps a few more early courses around here. And now I find he was one of the early and initial members of Pine Valley. Was Francis Warner also part of that early ultra collaboration as well?
Perhaps Warner's name should be added to that interesting list of early amateur architects who made up the mostly "amateur architect" "Philadelphia School of Golf Architecture".
Dan:
Sorry, I didn't realize D. Malley was you until just now.