I've played a number of Robert White courses and never realized that his stint at Shawnee was so brief. I say that because he designed a bunch of courses in the Poconos and although Matt Ward sees them as awful, I think many of them are quite a bit of fun.
Here's the deal on the White courses I've played.
1) He moved next to no earth on the midsections of his holes. His tees are generally low profile, conforming to the land nicely, but many of his greens are propped up a bit, with both good slope, as well as some thoughtful internal contour. Some of his greensites also utilize geometric features, with sharp slopes falling away.
2) Because of the severity of the land on a number of his courses I've played, and his aversion (or, probably, lack of funds) to moving earth, he created some of the wackiest, naturally bizarre holes I've seen. There are many blind shots, many shots utilizing changes of elevation, many side sloping shots (I defy anyone to keep a ball on the 18th fairway at Glen Brook during a dry summer, for instance), and when his courses are played firm and fast, require patience, understanding, restraint, and creativity to negotiate.
3) Most are in the 6,200 yard range, which means that most of them haven't really been tinkered with much since they were created, thankfully. At that time, that was a fairly lengthy course. Some have been overgrown with trees, but others have been maintained fairly well, if modestly.
The courses of his I've played are;
Berkleigh CC (PA)
Buck Hill Falls (PA) Red nine
East Potomac Park (DC)
Glen Brook (PA)
Green Hills (PA) A really fun old nine-holer with original features, circa 1939
Mount Pocono (PA) A really strange nine holer he built for a couple of teachers after WWI. I believe a couple of holes were lost/altered after Route 940 was widened.
Pine Lakes CC (SC)
Skytop (PA)
Water Gap (PA)
Wiscasset (PA) (NLE)
I've heard good things about Manasquan River and hope to see it in the future.