Oddly the current club history has no mention of Campbell.- TMac
That is odd. Do you think it's a carry-over from the days when Pros were second class citizens at some courses, or does it change the cachet to say a Pro was involved and that MHC wasn't purely the product of an amateur sportsman.
Rather than carry-over, I think this might have been the period to which you refer.
From the Plain-Dealer in Cleveland, April 19, 1908:
An active member would have been much more visible to a membership as a whole, and generally worked very hard for a very long time to nurture the golf course. This seems to have been more highly valued that planning the course in the first place. But also, crediting someone from their own social class might have come much easier for these men.
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Can someone tell us how his architecture differed from the efforts of other early pros? I see no evidence of that on the early Merion course frankly.
Mike can you be more specific about the features from the old course at Merion that so offend you? Were they on tbe original nine or the added nine? Were they there when the course opened? Or were they added by members or other professionals?
While I can guess your motivations for trying to demean men like Campbell, it is shortsighted on your part. Did you forget already about the time and energy you and Joe spent trying to prove that the the American courses Wilson played around the turn of the Century more than prepared him to design Merion? Now, you have the soul of golf shrieking. A cynic might note that your story changes with the point you are trying to make.
David,
I never said any hole at the original Merion course was 78 yards.
My mistake. It was 65 yards or 72 yards.
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Peter,
I don't think Colt came to the United States until some years later, offhand I think it was 1913. A few others had demonstrated the importance of a good routing by then. In 1915 when Behr wanted to highlight how a course should be routed, he used NGLA as his example. I don't think there were too many "well-heeled and well traveled insiders who were familiar with golf course architecture and its developing ideas, ethos, ideals." At least not in the United States in 1906. There was Leeds and there was Macdonald and Whigham, Travis, and some of the professionals. Tillinghast probably qualified but I am not sure he had quite come into his own in 1906. No doubt there were more, but those that were tended to stick out like sore thumbs. I think you overestimate the breadth of interest in and knowledge about the intricacies of golf courses among the social elite until NGLA came online.
This is a concept you have repeated numerous times, this idea that there was this large groundswell or buildup of developing thought before NGLA, but I really do not think there is any evidence of this. If you have any such evidence of his I'd love to see it. Thanks.
As for Myopia, I believe Tom MacWood posted above that the original nine holes is mostly intact and part of the existing 18 holes. But even if Leeds started from scratch (and I don't think that was the case) I would still think that Willie Campbell's work at the Club would be considered an important event in the club's history. Willie Campbell was a very big deal. And he was apparently important to Leeds, given him telling stories about shots that Campbell had tried.
Recognizing the contributions of non-members was obviously not high on the priority list at some of these clubs.