Wayne and Mike, are you guys really back to discussing the manifests?
As I said in my IMO, we don't need the manifests to figure out the timing of the trip.
WILSON TOLD US THAT HE TRAVELED ABROAD TO STUDY GOLF COURSES AFTER THE NGLA TRIP. Wayne now knows when the NGLA trip occurred, and he knows that I know when it occurred. So we both know that there was no time for Wilson to have traveled abroad to study golf courses between the NGLA trip and the (now) well-documented study trip in 1912.
I just cannot understand why you guys continue to insist on ignoring Hugh I Wilson.
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But back to the thread . . .
Wayne, I am confused about a few things.
1. Early in the thread you stated that Peters was not involved in any design work with Flynn. Later you state that Peters was involved with Flynn in some unknown capacity. Could you clarify?
- Are you saying he was not involved with design work, but was involved in some other capacity?
- Or are you now saying that you do not know whether Peters was involved in the design work?
- If you are still denying that Peters was involved in design work, what is your basis for doing so?
2. You wrote,
"That 1979 letter mentioned a course her father built for Wm Plunkett in Heartwellville, VT." Is this the basis for you concluding that Flynn
designed this course?
- Why would you equate
building a course with
designing it?
- Is there any other evidence that Flynn actually designed the course? Or is there only the mention that he built it?
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In the end, your protege is responsible for getting the history nearly all WRONG. Promote his work if you like, but that sort of rewriting we can all do without.
Wayne, you continue to take shots at my essay without any basis whatsoever. As you know, my essay was on the money in all the crucial points: Wilson did did not travel overseas to study architecture before Merion East was designed; he was a rank novice who had no idea to lay out and design a fundamentally sophisticated golf course such as the original Merion East. M&W were not only involved in the design process from before the land was purchased until construction began, they were the driving creative forces behind the design of the course and ultimately determined the lay out. etc. As for the unsupported claim of 5 proposed layouts, I have a very good idea of how and when those came into being.
But how about we put all this behind us? Let me update my essay with the more complete record and we can get on to Part II. Part II is where the real fun will begin anyway.