Neil have you thought about going on the internet and asking a bunch of sad obsessives who worship old dead guys?
http://www.charliechaplin.com/
Tony, I thought I'd already done that?!!
Seriously though, if you read my initial post I indicated that I had emailed (twice in fact) the Chaplin Museum people who had not bothered to reply. I will try this other website and see if I have any luck there at all.
Bill
I vaguely recall some conjecture that Mackenzie might have been involved with the Awahnee course, as was the conjecture he was involved at Wawona which was apparently incorrect. You played there in the late 50's Bill? That's the part of the decade I was born in!
Apparently the Awahnee course was pulled up in the late 1970's. This is what I found out about Awahnee and Wawona from the internet:
AWAHNEE
"Kim Porter's life has been about preservation, about saving something good. So when he heard the National Park Service would do away with the Awahnee golf course, he found a way to keep it. "I took the greens from Awahnee and put them in here at the Wawona Golf Course," said Porter, the superintendent at Wawona, a man who has given new meaning to the term "greenskeeper."
WAWONA
"Clarence Washburn hired golf course architect Walter Fovargue in 1917. The nine-hole golf course was dedicated in June of 1918 with Peter Hay raising a flag which fronts the circular fountain at the entry to Wawona. The first golf course in the Sierra Nevada was born. Fovargue was a very good golfer who won the Northwest Open in Seattle in 1917. The previous year he finished third behind U.S. Open champion Fred McLeod and JJ McDermitt in a national championship at Augusta CC, and shot 299 to finish high at the U.S. Open in Minnesota at Minikahda Club, won by Chick Evans. In-depth research of Fovargue reveals that he collaborated with William P. Bell as the original architects of Lakeside Country Club in San Francisco, which was purchased in 1922 by The Olympic Club and eventually hosted four U.S. Opens. Local legend has Alister MacKenzie involved with the Wawona Golf Course. The Washburn family was known to socialize with the Del Monte and Hay family of Pebble Beach fame, a social circle that included MacKenzie and Fovargue. Peter Hay, namesake of the 9-hole course at Pebble Beach, was the first golf professional at Wawona. MacKenzie may have looked at the plans for Wawona, but this course belonged to Fovargue."
David
Yes I have read that Fairbanks ranch was divided up and a new course built there in recent years. I could not find anything about a Fairbanks course beyond that 1926 article that said he planned to build a private course there. If one was built, no need for it to have been a short course given he had 800 acres to play with. Appreciate anything you can find.
Thanks all
Neil