I believe what follows just might be one of the neatest and most valuable pieces of research information I've ever seen in my years on GOLFCLUBATLAS.com.
The reason I say this is this information from the contemporaneous observation and report of a truly recognized architect and architectural expert has apparently not been seen in many, many decades and as such has completely escaped all the researchers any of us are aware of or familiar with. In fact this article, could've been residing in God Only Knows what repositories for up to 95 years.
The primary reason I think this information is so good is because it not only explains a particular hole (The 9th at Piping Rock) in specific detail, but it also finally answers one of the most mysterious questions I'm aware of about a famous Macdonald/Raynor "Template" hole!
I'm speaking of course about the so-called Macdonald/Raynor American "Biarritz" hole and whether or not there was ever ORIGINALLY intended to be green space BEFORE the swale or if, in fact, there ever was.
I think many of us on here are also aware that the Macdonald/Raynor "Biarritz" has its name taken after a famous hole in Biarritz France that played across a deep gorge or finger of a bay. No one seems to know if that French hole had a dramatic swale in it.
And I think many of us suspected that despite the name (Biarritz) the actual prominent and massively long green formation and dramatic swale may've been borrowed by Macdonald (conceptually for a par 3 rather than par 4 green) from North Berwick's #16.
So what until you read this:
"The ninth (Piping Rock) is a very uncommon hole. I have never seen one like it. There are two large greens, one beyond the other, with a hollow between them and serious trouble on either side in the shape of bunkers. It must be 220 yards (I speak from memory) from the tee to the center of the farthest green. It is slightly down hill, so that one can see exactly what there is to do. It will take a fine cleek shot or a difficult drive with a wooden club by a second class player, as the gulley which separates the two greens must be run through at the end of the shot. This is one of the only good cleek holes I have ever seen. There is a slight upward slope beyond the green so that there may be no fear of hitting the ball too hard---the difficulty is to get there."
Piping Rock's Biarritz 9th is the first American Biarritz done by Macdonald/Raynor in 1913, and as most of us know it was obviously something of a combination concept hole from various things Macdonald was aware of abroad (Macdonald always did explain that many of his template holes were parts of holes or various parts of hole principles from abroad reinterpreted in various ways over here).
But better yet, that first hand description of Piping Rock's Biarritz from the year it opened (1913) was by none other than Devereaux Emmet, Macdonald associate or design committee member with Whigam and Travis before Macdonald dropped him) at NGLA!!! Who would know the real design deal and concept on a particular Macdonald/Raynor hole better than him other than Macdonald, Raynor and perhaps Whigam? And the best point is he was right there in 1913 looking at TWO GREENS one beyond the other on Piping's 9th!
So there you have it----eg the very first Macdonald/Raynor Biarritz proves that green space was not only intended but in that particular case (the 9th at Piping Rock) actually originally HAD IT. (Personally I think the fact that it was apparently TWO GREENS with a swale between them that probably wasn't even green space makes the whole thing even more interesting than ever suspected!!!).
But I've also got to mention that this information just shows what's still out there on research material that we don't know about and has been long forgotten and it also shows that even some of us who think we are experts on this old stuff and their concepts still have a lot of digging and researching and rethinking to do.
For this particular information I'd like to thank our very good friend and remarkably dedicated researcher, The Creek Club's George Holland. This guy is a dedicated research mole unlike any other I've seen in that he will not stop at anything to find stuff. I bet he's probably behind some furnace in the cellar of an old clubhouse as I speak checking to see if Raynor's routing of Cypress Point might, by chance, be back there.
And this also indicates how cool unselfish research collaboration can be and can be on this website from its many and various resources and sources. Let's hope we have seen the end of some putting opinions on here with what they say is informational support and then "pledging" never to show it to anyone or to help others or those associated with them with it!
Way to go, George Holland, you just found the answer to one of the longest on-going questions and hole and hole concept mysteries on this website, maybe in architecture of how one of Macdonald/Raynor's template holes was intended to be or once was---and there's even a little wrinkle in it (that it may've been two greens, one beyond the other, separated by a swale that was not green space) that I don't think anyone on here EVER suspected before.
With this information, what will some of those Biarritz hole courses and clubs do now-----eg they may have an additional maintenance and playability option.