"3. I don't think HG Lloyd was engaging in hyperbole, but he did under the meaning of "APPROXIMATE LOCATION OF THE ROAD.""
You don't think Lloyd was engaging in hyperbole but you think he did engage in hyperbole when he said in a Nov. 15. 1910 circular to the membership?
My post was meant to read "I don't think HG Lloyd was engaging in hyperbole, but he did under
stand the meaning of 'APPROXIMATE LOCATION OF THE ROAD.'" My mistake.
"2. Despite your outrage, you are WRONG about the acreage on the 1910 plan. You are off by probably 6 acres or more. Hire someone capable of understanding how to determine these things if you cannot figure it out yourself."
I'm not outraged in the slightest, I merely think the contentions you made in your essay are very wrong and that it's very important to know why. How is it you determine either me or Lloyd are off by 6 acres or more on the land in green on that 11/15/10 plan that is marked "Golf Course" and delineated on the western side of the top of the L by the words "approximate road?"
My mistake again, I must have confused your rude and insulting post with outrage. I forgot that you are almost always insulting and rude, whether outraged or not.
As for your question, I explained it above. Plus I measured it. If you don't believe me I suggest you go spend the day walking off the metes and bounds and do the calculations yourself. Or you could hire someone to do it for you.
I do believe Francis. I just don't believe your interpretation of when that land swap and his idea of it took place.
Not so. You don't believe when he said that they could not fit the course into the land before the swap, and you do not believe his specific description of the swapped land.
Again Tom, You continue to ignore my offer. I'll explain to you where you went wrong on your reading of the minutes regarding the swap, and you provide me what I need to vet the claims you have made against me. I'll even walk you through how to check the acreage.
A pretty good deal for you anyway, given that all I am asking for is what any standard of civility requires from you.
But why do I get the feeling that you already know what is wrong with your reasoning, and that you are just trying to pull the wool over our eyes.
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Patrick,
Mike's depiction of what we know about Barker's contribution is inaccurate. I said almost a year ago that the biggest problem with my essay was that I probably sold Barker's contribution short, and now there is more support for my early comment. But because I don't want Mike Cirba's head to explode, I will hold off on getting into it until I finish the next draft of my essay.
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Jeff,
A simple question based on your area of expertise.
- Assume: as part of a larger development you are told to design a course on a specific 117 acres of land, as depicted on a "land plan." Assume that you have trouble fitting a few of the holes, so the developer agrees to let you swap some of the land you have been allotted for a few acres of land you have not been allotted. When you finish you have used exactly 117 acres of land.
??
Compare the acreage of the parcels swapped. Did you get MORE ACREAGE than you gave up? LESS ACREAGE than you gave up? Or THE EXACT SAME ACREAGE?
Stupid question I realize, but I'd appreciate an answer, because some here are having trouble with this concept. In fact you may be having trouble with the concept, but I am sure that must be because of a misunderstanding of the facts. I understand you are trying to lead them in a more reasonable direction, but in the process I think you have gotten some of the facts wrong.
A few facts that hopefully we all can agree on:
- The 2.86 acres behind the clubhouse was not owned by HDC, Lloyd, or even MCC for decades, and it has nothing to do with the purchase.
- The amount of acreage to be purchased and ultimately purchased wasn't a non-specific amount like
anything under 120 acres. It was exact:
117 Acres. So, if there was a swap AFTER Nov. 15, 1910, the swap had to be for equal acreage. They announced a purchase of
117 ACRES on Nov. 17, 1910, and they ultimately purchased
117 ACRES months later. So another question:
??
You noted earlier that on the overlay it looks like MCC gave up a substantial chunk of property across from the clubhouse, land Francis described as "the land now covered with fine homes along Golf House Road." So what did MCC get in return?? That is, what could they have received other than the "the land about 130 yards wide by 190 yards long - the present location of the 15th green and 16th tee?" Remember, the amounts have to be equal.
And while I know that designers really hate to second guess each other, perhaps you can make an exception.
??
Do you think you could have fit the holes into the area given the dimensions of the Nov. 1910 land plan? In other words, whether that triangle was 95 or 120 yards wide at its based, couldnt they have fit in a green and a tee? Assume of course you are talking about 1910 liability concerns. After all these guys played over public road, do you really thing they would have insisted on a playing corridor for a green and a tee of more than that??
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TEPaul, I am not aware of much of anything the Construction Committee did before February 1, 1911. Do you have the exact date on which they were appointed.
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Mike, you continue to misrepresent my argument in every way possible. Obviously you have no interest in what actually happened.