I'm affraid its not that black & white. Since no one has seen Barker's orignal routing or the 'final five' routings its very difficult to say who did what. We also have no idea if any of the 'final five' resembles the course as built, for all we know Macdonald may have rejected them all. There are many unanswered questions.
In this case the defensive came in the emotional response and attacks on David. Before it was done you had attempted to trash Macdonald, Whigham and Barkers careers in hopes you might elevate Wilson. Also the lengths you went to put Wilson on boats to Argentina and other ports unknown was pretty bizarre. And along the way you also tried (futile) to denigrate one of the best research tools we have today. Your defensiveness became so accute you got on here and accused me of holding evidence for years so I could embarras you.
In the end David is responsible re-writing the early history of Merion-East and correcting an erroneous story that had been told for years. Tom,
I'm sorry but it is that black and white. Barker's routing wasn't used and considered land that isn't part of what the club bought and didn't consider land that they did. It wasn't used. Macdonald and Whigham never submitted a routing. Wilson and the Committee came up with multiple iterations, both before and after the visit to NGLA where they spent one day looking at sketches of holes overseas and the next going over the NGLA golf course. They asked Macdonald to help them select the best of the five in April, then purchased the Francis Land Swap land and started building.
You can deny and obfuscate and try to cloud this in mystery all you want but that's it in a nutshell.
As far as the Shipping Manifests that you hold out as gospel truth, let me ask a few questions because you know I've reviewed them in depth as well.
Did they require first names?
Did they require age?
Did they require residency?
Are there obvious mistakes, as in the case of George Crump?
Did they require gender?
Are there obvious mistakes in terms of companions and who was travelling with whom?
What about private vessels? Did they always submit manifests to the governement?
Why wouldn't one consider Argentina as a possible route of travel back for Wilson? He was a Maritime Insurance man who might have had business in many ports of call.
There is no question that Hugh Wilson travelled overseas in 1912, and we also know he didn't go in 1911. We don't know if he travelled prior because the manifests themselves are fraught with error, omissions, and vague information.
There is nothing defensive at all about this, Tom. I couldn't believe that you guys were using these as gospel to "prove" your theories once I started looking at them, as they had so many errors and inconsistencies that they raise way more questions than they answer.
I also would challenge your charge that I somehow insulted the work of Barker, Macdonald, and Whigham.
NGLA wasn't opened until 1911 and didn't even have the opening tournament for Macdonald's close friends until after Macdonald came to Merion in 1910. Barker had nothing built on the ground that either of us were able to identify by June 1910. It seems given his short time in the states and the geographic dispersion of his courses that most of them were either paper jobs or "18 stakes on a Sunday afternoon", very much like what he did for Connell who hoped to entice Merion to buy his property.
There is nothing insulting about stating these facts and pointing out these tiimings. This is the reality as it happened then.
Ok...I did kid around about Whigham being Macdonald's servile toady, but if ever threads needed some attempts at humor, boy did these ever!