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The library is seeking funding to have professional archivists and student assistants go through all of the materials; the work will take up to two years to complete. A basic survey of the collection will identify categories to "get the materials into some kind of reasonable order," Engst said. "Even how to store them properly is an interesting question."
"The Finger Lakes region remained his starting point, and [it] shaped his designs for decades ... if for no other reason than it has the perfect topography for golf," said Jones' biographer, James Hansen of Auburn University. "Trent Jones came away from the Finger Lakes with a certain aesthetic in his mind. He had a sense for what was beautiful and pleasing to the eye and how that translated to a golf course."
That is very interesting. I would think there could potentially be some fascinating information in there.
Quote from: Tom MacWood on December 11, 2010, 05:12:48 PMThat is very interesting. I would think there could potentially be some fascinating information in there. What would be most interesting to me is if there is any data/documents about Jones' thoughts about GCA as a business. Is there any question that he is the Architect that turned GCA into a business?Tom Doak,Any thoughts as to where your archives go? Ithaca or Hubbard Heights?
Sitting in Ithaca, the RTJ archives have little value to golf as they are simply hard to reach being 4 1/2 hours from NYC, Philly, Boston..... Now when they get digitized and can be shared with the R&A, the USGA and others, they will increase in value IMO. Same with your thoughts here. Now they are random thoughts, but somewhere there is an algorithm of Doak thoughts that somebody will figure out. Might be 5 years, could be 50? Yale took down their great web archive collection from the public for now about the Yale Golf Gourse, but that does not mean it is gone forever.
Phil Young,I was thinking of Tilly more than Ross when I first wrote what I wrote as there are a number of reports that he died with little money. Obviously the depression was a big part of that but right or wrong I view Tilly (and others of his era) more as Artisans rather than a "Professional Golf Course Architect". Growing up in Philly, I heard the name RJT more than Tilly on television because he created a "Brand". Never really heard of William Flynn till GCA.com.Tom Doak,I think you are being a little short sighted in the digital age. Probably the greatest tangible assets of GCA.com is your 12,000+ post (plus others before you registered). Now you did not invent golf, but the Rules of Basketball just sold for $4.3 million at auction:http://www.suntimes.com/sports/2787308-452/naismith-rules-basketball-family-football.htmlSomewhere in the archives here is at the very least a good book about Tom Doak when you are dead and gone. How these types of collections are organized and structured in the future is yet to be seen, but trust me, people not related to golf are figuring out how to monetize these types of assets. The complexity will be sorting our your post (good) from my post (bad), but it will be figured out.Sitting in Ithaca, the RTJ archives have little value to golf as they are simply hard to reach being 4 1/2 hours from NYC, Philly, Boston..... Now when they get digitized and can be shared with the R&A, the USGA and others, they will increase in value IMO. Same with your thoughts here. Now they are random thoughts, but somewhere there is an algorithm of Doak thoughts that somebody will figure out. Might be 5 years, could be 50? Yale took down their great web archive collection from the public for now about the Yale Golf Gourse, but that does not mean it is gone forever.
I did watch the struggle between the brothers over this for a few years. Much of this would have been the bones of a great book on the life of RTJ Sr.