Bryan, no offense meant, but it is up to me - not you - to determine what my position is or isn't.
The caption of the Brown pic doesn't ring true to me because it seems to describe something that seems physically impossible to me. I've left open the possibility that someone will make it make sense, but no one has thus far.
As for the May 1913 pic from the magazine, it still looks to me that the two were taken from the same ridge but not the same place; however I don't have a strong basis for saying the caption is wrong, and it is a strong possibility that I am I am just not understanding the photo. Jim knows the site and if he says that is what it looks like from the 3rd tee, I don't have a strong basis to go against him on this.
It is two different situations. The former seems physically impossible, while the latter is more just a question of interpretation. In this regard his personal experience carries much more weight with me than do my own efforts to understand an old photograph. He isn't suggesting something that seems physically impossible with regard to the man photo.
I guess the past pages have been about discrediting others positions on what the photos show as opposed to espousing your own position of where they were taken from.
I guess so. But had you been paying attention you'd know that I have never been claiming to have known the answer in this discussion. Quite a few of you seem to think you have it all figured out, but I have made no such claim.
With some hesitance, I had offered an alternative view of from where the photo(s)
could have been taken, but that view has some issues I haven't been able to resolve, and don't have a strong sense that I am correct. It was just an idea. You guys didn't buy it, and that is fine. I immediately wrote it off as an idea that didn't get much traction amongst this esteemed crowd, because I've got little to offer in the way of proof and I am not going to bang endlessly bang the drum on an idea that has little factual support.
I am much more comfortable with this conclusion than pretending I know something for certain when I don't.
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As for the dam and pond, I wouldn't really call it a "supposition" to say that, generally, "
surveyors/mapmakers don't draw objects on maps that aren't there yet." They might have on certain types of plans, but would such plans would be so marked?
If your position is that they reflected future changes on this map without so noting, then your premise that this is a good resource for understanding the pre-construction site collapses on itself.