Mike,
That reviews of courses appear in competing magazines about the same golf course, at the same time and even mentioning that the reviewer played it is nothing more than standard reporting!
C'mon now. It happens all the time today and it happened back then as well. Or are you saying that tilly was the ONLY golf writer of note in the Philadelphia area to be invited to play those courses at that time? That is ludicrous as well.
I respect your right to hold onto your belief on this, but I honestly don't see how it could be even remotely possible...
Tom, you asked, "Do you mind if we run through all of this on a timeline basis----both who he wrote for and for how long and what he was doing during all this time with golf course architecture?"
One of the things that most intrigued me about Tilly as an architect in the very beginning when I began to research about him was the question 'How?' How was he able to accomplish what he did during a point in history where telephones were beyond a luxury, automobiles were somewhat common but not totally and most roads were not paved and there were no highways.
As I learned more and came across more information I became even more astounded as the amount and breadth of his writings became known. The question 'How?' came even more to the forefront as I wondered just how was he able to write many of the articles that he did and get them to the publisher of whatever journal, magazine, etc... that needed them on time.
In addition to this is his photography. That also is so greatly underappreciated in its quality, importance and, especially important in this discussion, the time he spent DEVELOPING THEM!
Photography in those days was quite different than today. Tilly took up photography in the late 1880's. He won a $25 prize for a photograph of his wife Lillian in 1895. Consider what that figure implies. It was a tremendous amount of money and so the competition must have brought out a lot of pretty good photographers. It also shows that Tilly must have been very good.
In those days the good photographer developed his own photographs and Tilly was no exception to this. He actually continued to do this throughout his life and carried all of his camera & developing equipment with him when he went on the road.
One of the surprises you might find when you read the bio is how in the early 1930's Ben Hogan came and visited Tilly at his home in New Jersey. While there Tilly gave him swing lessons which they FILMED. IN fact they developed them immediately after each filming and then studied them frame-by-frame. So he remained very involved in photography his entire life as well.
I bring this up because others wrote of Tilly that he never showed up at any tournament, local or national, without his camera, and that is why his photograph collection of golfers of that time were said to be larger than anyone else's by far. It is also the reason that the fire which destroyed his private papers, drawings, documents and photographs where they were being stored in the early 1950's robbed generations of future golfers far more than glimpses into the reality of the game in those years.
All of these things took time and the more that one learns about what he was able to accomplish the more staggered with it one must become.
So to answer your question, yes. I have been working on a Tilly chronolgy for Volume II since even bfore the bio (Volume I) was published. I have traced out many of his travels and discovered him in places and at times that no one had previously thought possible. I have received a great deal of help from friends and strabgers who have become friends. I now get emails surprises with snippets of 'Tilly sightings', newspaper clippings, etc... at least several times a week.
An example. One was sent to me the other day by Neil Crafter. It was just a short mention, two paragraphs, from the Des Moines News dated April 4, 1916.
IOWA... 1916! That is the first time I have ever seen a mention of Tilly in IOWA during the teens! Was this a report sent out over teh wires and simply printed as a filler piece? Probably, but at this point no one can say for sure. More research needs to be done, but it is highly possible that he was there because he was in Oklahoma and Texas that year.
All that having been said, building Tilly's timeframe is a huge task. Even identifying all of the places he wrote for is difficult as we find new ones quite often as well.
You also asked, "Is all this, and all the details of it in your book?" As far as the details are concerned, some are and some aren't, but there is quite a lot. Fortunately there is Volume II!
"I hear your book is marvelous and I'm ashamed to say I don't have it." Thank you for the kind words...
"I'm going to order it first thng tomorrow!" It's about freakin' time!
Don't worry, I'm not insulted at all. Wayne has a copy if you want to borrow his, but I guess I shouldn't encourage that as the thought of you breaking open the Bank of Paul and spending even a little bit of that old Philly money tickles my fancy!