Couple things Mike;
Your Swap notion didn't touch HDC land so your first explanation doesn't seem to fit. Lloyd being the President of MCCGA Corp is the best rationale for him being the key in March or April, but still doesn't explain ignoring the Chairman of the Committee at that point in time.
The theoretical road HAD to be the obstacle Mike...if gaining the ability to move (reconfigure) it after so long contemplating a solution for the final five holes was the lynchpin to having everything fall into place then they were absolutely viewing the road as a hard border. Remember, the whole idea was to get a golf course in there so that the real estate values would jump. Even saying it was an "approximate road" as opposed to a hypothetical road means they were sure it was going to be close to that route...in the grand scheme of things the current road is very close ot the drawing.
Jim,
I think we're saying almost the same thing two different ways, but coming to separate conclusions about what it means.
I agree that when they were working out there with their Topo Map they had to have some boundary that they were working within on that western edge, even if not yet formalized, but simply because they wanted to stay within the constraint of the 117 acres they had secured.
As Tom Paul mentioned, that topo map may have been exact to the P&H November 1910 Land Plan, which oddly seems to measure 124 acres, and it may have been one more refined down to 117 acres, but no matter. The example of what I'm driving at works with both.
Let's say for discussion purposes that they used the 124 acres of the P&H Land Plan as the basis of their property constraints, with the idea that they were going to work it down to the 117 acres secured. Let's say for argument purposes they thought they gave themselves a little room to play in certain areas, but realized 117 was the goal.
That being said, I'm not sure how you can say "your swap notion didn't touch HDC land"? The actual course that was built compared to the approximate road boundary drawn on the P&H Land Plan marches all over HDC land up and down the length of it, from the overlap of the first green to the 14th upper fairway and entire green, to the whole left side of the 15th fairway and just left of that green, etc.
Furthermore, at the end of the day, Merion "gave back" land to HDC across the street from the clubhouse ("the area of fine homes along Golf House Road"), as well as gave back the upper end of the triangle, north and west of the northern Haverford College boundary.
These were the land swaps in question, I believe, and after all of the 'puts' and 'gets' along that border, the other complicating matter is that at the end of the day the Committee needed 120 acres, not 117, to make it work.
That is why the Board needed to approve the purchase of 3 acres additional in April 1911, at a price of $7500, although strangely enough, when the deal was finalized in July of that year, Merion was able to purchase the 120 acres at the $85,000 price they had secured the original 117 secured acres for.
I guess having Lloyd on both sides of the deal had its advantages.
Tom Paul,
I think it's also fair to point out that when David wrote his essay, he didn't have the advantage of seeing the entire 1950 Richard Francis article, but only those parts transcribed in the Tolhurst and Heilman history books.
Certainly that article provides much of the type of insightful information we're discussing here, from Francis mentioning the committee's role in both laying out and constructing the course, from his being "added" to the committee of Wilson and the others, of Francis talking specifically about the design decisions the committee made (i.e. thinking the road would make a good hazard), to his mention of the purpose and timing of Wilson's trip overseas as well as his claim of Wilson's authorship of the redan hole based on that trip, as well as pointing out some of the more amateurish mistakes they made at first, as well as no mention of CBM's role in the creation of the course, etc..
I would think knowing any and all of those things prior to writing the essay may have caused some appropriate changes, but as I said earlier, based on the evidence he had on hand, his essay made some very understandable assumptions and even a reasonable conclusion. But, he simply was working with what he had at the time and I think a big step towards getting along would be all of us simply coming to that mutual understanding.