Tom and David,
Serious question...
If you don't believe Weeks and May just "made it up" separately, where do you think they alternately discovered that information?
I know you don't want to admit that there may be internal club documents in existence that don't support the newspaper accounts that the two men used, but if they didn't make it up, and you don't think they did, how do you think they both separately made what in your estimations is an error?
1. There is a big difference between getting things wrong and "making things up." One can make mistakes without lying or making things up, and as I have explained repeatedly, I think that is what happened with Weeks.
2. I have never claimed that there were no internal club records. I have claimed that I don't think there are internal club records
which adequately explain who laid out the original course. I other words, there may be some club records, and they may even help explain why Weeks got it wrong, but it seems extremely unlikely that they will explain who exactly laid out the course.
3. As for where Weeks got is information, I have no idea, but like all historical analysis his claims carry very little weight without the backup. Unfortunately, it does not sound like he properly sourced his book and so we are left guessing at his source(s.) All we know is that there a a number of things about his account that are either outright wrong or in direct contradiction with contemporaneous documentation, and from that I think it is safe to infer that whatever information he was relying upon did not provide a complete picture of what happened.
4. While you guys seem to put great weight on club records, they can seriously mislead the researcher, especially by virtue of things that they may not have even addressed. Take Shinnecock, for example, where we have been told that the records do not indicate that Shinnecock had a professional in 1892 and 1893. From this the assumption was apparently drawn that the club must not have been a professional for those years. Therefore, if there was no other professional there for those years, then Davis must have been responsible for the lay out of the golf course as it existed in 1893. Not trying to open up a Shinnecock discussion here, just trying to point out how easy it is to get started down the wrong path because of club records.
5. Something similar
might have happened at Myopia. Say, for example, that the minutes from the March meeting read something like this:
Bush: Appleton, Merrill, Gardner proposed formal introduction of golf to Myopia, and reported that land east and south of slope is well suited for 9 hole course. Board approved the proposal, authorized expenditure, and authorized Bush and Parker of grounds committee to direct above named members to oversee the development of course. Formal introduction of golf at Myopia tentatively scheduled for first gala event of season, mid-June. I am not saying that the minutes say this or anything like it, I am just trying to give you an example of how the minutes themselves could have lead to the confusion about who laid out the course. Except for the colorful descriptions of the snow melting, etc., about all the speculation about the initial course (including the oft ignored claim that Parker and Bush were responsible) could have come from such an entry. Combine this with the lack of a mention of Campbell, and it would have been very easy to conclude that either AMG were responsible or that BP were responsible. Yet the actual entry is entirely consistent with Campbell having laid out the course.