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Patrick_Mucci

Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #175 on: January 03, 2012, 04:48:05 PM »
Bryan, David, Tom M and all of the offline lunatic email senders, ;D

Ask yourself this question.

Is it possible, after living in a town for 39 years that you'd be unfamiliar with the land a mere 13 miles away ?

Especially land with roads, trolleys and trains leading to and/or through it ?

JESII

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Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #176 on: January 03, 2012, 04:54:52 PM »
“Baker is the primary source for a lot of info. The 1910 trip to the UK, the consideration of two sites prior to, and the train station. I suspect is also the primary source for Crump's familiarity with the site from hunting.”

And when asked where Baker referenced Crump’s familiarity with the site from hunting he responded by simply underlining…

The recollections of Joseph H. Baker of the PVGC and of George A. Crump, the founder - good friend of many years and hunting companion on more than fifty trips over the United States.

This is a recent implication by Macwood that Baker said Crump knew of the site from hunting…do you think it says that David?

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This in response to my comments on the Shelley 1909 hunting picture being evidence Crump knew the land previously from hunting:
Jim
Shelly became a member of PVGC in 1928. He would have been exposed to Baker, Perrin, Carr and many other old timers who knew what happened. His understanding is consistent with the others; he is a credible source.

Is this attempting to put Carr and Baker in as supporting sources for the hunting angle?

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Another attempt to say Baker is the source for Crump hunting on the Pine Valley ground before it became Pine Valley:
In regards to the photograph of Crump hunting in the Shelly book, there is a similar photo of Crump hunting in the woods in the most recent history. Crump has different close on in this photo so it is clearly a different hunting trip. The likely source of those photos is Joseph Baker. Baker was a regular hunting companion of Crump's; he claimed to have been on over 50 hunting trips with Crump. He was also Crump's companion on the 1910 golfing trip overseas. Baker was one of the first to build a home at PV, he began living there in 1916 and was still living there as late as 1951. I'm not sure when he died. Shelly also lived at PV. He began living there in 1957.

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I asked Tom;
Don't you agree that it's virtually certain that your hunting sources can all be traced to a single report and not from George Crump's mouth? Do you think Crump told Warner Shelly he had hunted on that specific property as a kid?

His response:
”It is unlikely Shelly is the source; the more likely source is Crump and Joseph Baker, Crump's hunting companion and long time PV resident. Travers said Crump told him directly he discovered the site while hunting.”

I don’t know, it looks like you’re pushing Joseph Baker pretty hard…

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This from John Arthur Brown…the 50 year President of the club:

"Pine Valley had a rather unusual beginning.

   In the early 1900 a group of enthusiastic golfers from the Philadelphia Country Club at Bala, Pennsylvania, occasionally journeyed to Atlantic City on the Reading Railroad to play the Atlantic City Country Club. George Crump was the leader of the group.

   OUR OLD RECORDS INDICATE that on one trip to Atlantic City, Crump saw pasture land near the town of Clementon, New Jersey, which apparently was suitable for a golf course. This raised is curiosity and later he and Howard Perrin, the first President of the Pine Valley Golf Club, spent several days tramping over the grounds which now comprise the Club.

   The property at the time was owned by Sumner Ireland who had a residence nearby. The railroad station at that point was then called Sumner.

   CRUMP’S OLD RECORDS INDICATE his interest in the property and the possibility, as he saw it, for the development of a most interesting inland golf course under seaside conditions, as the property had one time had been covered by the ocean.

   Crump formed a syndicate and in 1912 bought 184 acres from Mr. Ireland. Some of the old newspaper articles are interesting in this connection. The Philadelphia Inquirer on Sunday, January 4, 1912, is worth quoting in full. It gives and excellent description."


I know you have the priviledge of individual interpretations that have little to do with reality but do you really think John Arthur Brown was referencing a mythological bogus story from a newspaper clipping that he stumbled upon?

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"Jim
That's true, but with so many solid news reports contradicting that story was there anyone who took that isolated story seriously? I didn't.

Of the numerous stories (Wilson, Bunker, Travers, Giles, Uzell, Ford, Wind and Shelley) claiming he found the site hunting and/or on horseback I believe the earliest is May 1914. "


So AWT being isolated means Brown was what? He told a distinct story from AWT.



Why is it that the 50 year President of the club plus two of George Crump's closest friends throughout the process made it clear that he found the site in the course of a search and did not mention hunting or anything of the like?

JESII

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Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #177 on: January 03, 2012, 04:56:45 PM »
Bryan, David, Tom M and all of the offline lunatic email senders, ;D

Ask yourself this question.

Is it possible, after living in a town for 39 years that you'd be unfamiliar with the land a mere 13 miles away ?

Especially land with roads, trolleys and trains leading to and/or through it ?


Hey Yogi...did you really just ask that question?

Why did you change your mind regarding Crump pointing out the site to AWT?

Patrick_Mucci

Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #178 on: January 03, 2012, 05:08:28 PM »
Bryan, David, Tom M and all of the offline lunatic email senders, ;D

Ask yourself this question.

Is it possible, after living in a town for 39 years that you'd be unfamiliar with the land a mere 13 miles away ?

Especially land with roads, trolleys and trains leading to and/or through it ?

Hey Yogi...did you really just ask that question?

Why did you change your mind regarding Crump pointing out the site to AWT?


Jim,

Sleep depravation is affecting your reading comprehension skills and your ability to remember previous posts.

In a reply to Jeff Brauer I offered an alternative solution that satisfied his position.

I NEVER felt that GAC FIRST discovered the land upon which to site PV on his speeding eastbound train ride to AC.
I haven't changed my mind on that issue, and don't intend to unless so directed by CBM when I next visit him in Southampton.


JESII

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #179 on: January 03, 2012, 05:37:32 PM »
Apparently your comprehension hasn't changed much at all...it still stinks.

Do you think Crump pointed out the spot to AWT at any time...irrespective of if it was his first sighting or his 100th?

Patrick_Mucci

Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #180 on: January 03, 2012, 05:40:05 PM »
Apparently your comprehension hasn't changed much at all...it still stinks.

Do you think Crump pointed out the spot to AWT at any time...irrespective of if it was his first sighting or his 100th?

Jim,

I think Crump pointed out PV to everyone he came in contact with who visited the area.


JESII

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Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #181 on: January 03, 2012, 05:45:12 PM »
Pat,

AWT wrote on January 12th 1913 that Crump had seen the land from the train three years earlier...I know you disagree that this was the first time Crump saw the property. I'm not asking about first but I am asking about prior to January 12th 1913...do you think Crump pointed out the spot to AWT prior to the article being written?

Bryan Izatt

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Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #182 on: January 03, 2012, 06:17:47 PM »
Bryan, David, Tom M and all of the offline lunatic email senders, ;D

Ask yourself this question.

Is it possible, after living in a town for 39 years that you'd be unfamiliar with the land a mere 13 miles away ?

Especially land with roads, trolleys and trains leading to and/or through it ?

Merchantville is more than 15 miles away from PV - it's possible that Crump might have missed those 184 acres in the half million acres within 15 miles of his home.

Which roads were those?  PV's property was initially land locked except for the RR.  Do you know when the White Horse Pike was finished to Berlin?  According to the Camden County Historical Society it was 1922.  But, what do they know?  The trolleys stopped at Clementon and there were no roads from there to the property.  Don't ever let reality get in the way.

I was saddened to hear of the passing of Dr. Katz, but he did leave behind a fine tribute to you from some years ago:

"The often wrong but never uncertain Pat Mucci seems to have eased off on his activity, as well.  Be still my heart."   ;)


Patrick_Mucci

Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #183 on: January 03, 2012, 06:48:32 PM »
Bryan, David, Tom M and all of the offline lunatic email senders, ;D

Ask yourself this question.

Is it possible, after living in a town for 39 years that you'd be unfamiliar with the land a mere 13 miles away ?

Especially land with roads, trolleys and trains leading to and/or through it ?

Merchantville is more than 15 miles away from PV - it's possible that Crump might have missed those 184 acres in the half million acres within 15 miles of his home.

Over 39 years ?

That's about 35 acres a day or only about 12,820 acres a year.


Which roads were those? 
The Pike and other roads, including the roads leading to the amusement park on the same road as PV


PV's property was initially land locked except for the RR. 

Do you know when the White Horse Pike was finished to Berlin? 
According to the Camden County Historical Society it was 1922.  But, what do they know? 

Berlin is further east than Clementon.
In addition, wasn't it you who posted photos of cars in the teens in the area near PV.
I think one of your posts described automotive transportation in the area, accompanied by pictures.


The trolleys stopped at Clementon and there were no roads from there to the property. 

If that's the case, why was there a train station there ?  If there were NO ROADS, would they just shove the passengers off the train into the woods, or would the passengers take roads to their final destination ?


Don't ever let reality get in the way.

You're the one totalling lacking when it comes to reality at PV.

Tell us again, how many times over what period of years have you visited the site and surrounding area.


I was saddened to hear of the passing of Dr. Katz, but he did leave behind a fine tribute to you from some years ago:

What you DON'T know, along with so many other things, is that Tom Egan and I were friends.
We played golf together at Baltusrol, where he was a member, where had me as his guest for many years.

Like TEPaul and Ran Morrissett, we used to bash each other on GCA.com and in personal IM's and emails.
Only an uninformed idiot would make a blanket statement without knowing all of the facts surrounding the relationship.
Again, like your lack of personal knowledge about PV, your total lack of knowledge regarding the relationship between Tom Egan and myself has led you to draw false and grossly incorrect conclusions.


"The often wrong but never uncertain Pat Mucci seems to have eased off on his activity, as well.  Be still my heart."   ;)



JESII

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #184 on: January 03, 2012, 06:56:40 PM »
Pat,

Before you get too far afield...


Pat,

AWT wrote on January 12th 1913 that Crump had seen the land from the train three years earlier...I know you disagree that this was the first time Crump saw the property. I'm not asking about first but I am asking about prior to January 12th 1913...do you think Crump pointed out the spot to AWT prior to the article being written?

Patrick_Mucci

Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #185 on: January 03, 2012, 07:03:17 PM »
Jim,

I don't know when AWT claims that GAC pointed out the area that PV was to be sited on.

Does anyone know the precise date ?

DMoriarty

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Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #186 on: January 03, 2012, 10:19:39 PM »
Isn't this pretty standard when the area in question is attached to a major metropolitan area? As you move away from Camden/Philadelphia the hunting would improve...no?

Generally, but it also would depend upon the nature of the grounds.  Flat, farmed land is generally not ideal for hunting whereas hilly, wooded land is generally better.  Judging by various reports, Clementon and environs was apparently among the better places to hunt in Camden County, particularly for small game and quail.  As a sportsman Crump would have been aware of this.  

Quote
I would have thought Joseph Baker would have been aware of the family hunting grounds, wouldn't you Tom?

I cannot speak for TomM, but as a long time hunting companion of Crump's, I would think that Baker would have been aware of where Crump commonly hunted.  Ironically, this seems to be very similar to the position that is causing you so much alarm.  I don't know for certain, but Baker is the possible source behind Shelley's version explaining Crump's familiarity with Pine Valley, and would have been someone who may have been able to identify Crump's location in those photographs.  
_____________________________________

Jim, I have read your collection of comments and quotes above, and I fail to understand the fuss.  TomM wrote, "I suspect is also the primary source for Crump's familiarity with the site from hunting.” And when asked why he suspected this, he pointed you toward a statement about their years of hunting together.

In other words you guys agree.  You both think that Baker would be a reliable source on whether or not Crump was familiar with the land from hunting.  You both apparently view Baker as "a credible source," as TomM put it.  You two take this inference in different direction.  Tom suspects that Baker may be the source behind the Shelly account, and this seems reasonable to me.  I am not sure what you think, but it seems you are arguing it is somehow unreasonable to suspect that Baker may have told Shelly that Crump knew the land from hunting, or to call Baker the likely source.  I don't get this.

Whatever you think, you claimed that TomM fabricated Baker's support. Surely after going back through the quotes you can see that he did not.    

While I don't know for certain, Baker seems a likely source to me, and I suspect it was him who confirmed the hunting story and the photos to Shelly.  Does this mean I too just fabricated Baker's support as well?
_________________________________

As for Brown, he wrote his account 50 years after the fact.  Are you really arguing that AWT's account cannot properly be called isolated even though it stood alone a half a century?  

When I read Brown, I assumed, rightly or wrongly, it was derivate of the newspaper articles, and that these were the records to which he referred.  Shelly seemed to confirm this when he stated that the train story came from newspaper accounts.   Wrongly or rightly, I have assumed that Shelly and Brown had access to the exact same records.  Does Brown's account differ from the newspaper accounts in any significant regard?

I don't think Brown "stumbled upon" the newspaper accounts.  I think it more likely that the club kept a record of such things.   Do you think something happened to the "club records" between the brown and shelley books?  

Also, none of this really backs up your claim, which was that TomM was intentionally hiding the Brown version (as if he was the only one with access to Brown.)  One look at TomM's IMO piece proves that this was not the case.  

Quote
Why is it that the 50 year President of the club plus two of George Crump's closest friends throughout the process made it clear that he found the site in the course of a search and did not mention hunting or anything of the like?

First, I assume we agree that, despite your earlier claim the contrary, Baker was not there and that his account is fifty years removed?   Second, as to the other two, to whom do you think they should have mentioned it, and how do you know that they didn't mention it to anyone?   Do you think they anticipated this idiocy?

____________________________

Jim, as for your question to Patrick, AWT's story isn't even consistent on the point (pun intended.)  AWT's more contemporaneous accounts do NOT say that AWT pointed out the property from the train, do they?  Didn't he write that Crump kept it to himself.  Didn't AWT add the point and himself to the story in 1933?
« Last Edit: January 03, 2012, 10:24:41 PM by DMoriarty »
Golf history can be quite interesting if you just let your favorite legends go and allow the truth to take you where it will.
--Tom MacWood (1958-2012)

DMoriarty

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #187 on: January 03, 2012, 10:40:39 PM »
Merchantville is more than 15 miles away from PV - it's possible that Crump might have missed those 184 acres in the half million acres within 15 miles of his home.

Come on Bryan, even you know enough about hunting to know this logic doesn't follow.  When it comes to hunting, not all acreage is equal.  From AWT's description of the NJ landscape the land around Clementon was about the closest remotely interesting hunting land to Merchantville, and various accounts I have read confirm that the hunting in Camden County occurred in the southern part of the county, and the area around Clementon was known for its quality hunting.  

Quote
Which roads were those?  PV's property was initially land locked except for the RR.  Do you know when the White Horse Pike was finished to Berlin?  According to the Camden County Historical Society it was 1922.  But, what do they know?  The trolleys stopped at Clementon and there were no roads from there to the property.  Don't ever let reality get in the way.

Apparently either they don't know too much, or you didn't research too carefully.  White Horse Pike reportedly dates back to its days as an Indian foot trail, and it and the RRs had long been the main thoroughfare to Atlantic City.   The 1922 date was apparently the date they finished paving the road, but it had long been in existence up until that point.  The road is so "storied" that it even has one of those little "Images of America" picture books written about it.
http://books.google.com/books?id=OLsI5cWUBuEC&printsec=frontcover&dq=White+horse+turnpike&hl=en&sa=X&ei=PrYDT4XZLaqbiAKNwvjSDg&ved=0CDAQ6AEwAA

I hope you don't mind me saying so, but as of late you only seem to research enough to possibly justify your preconceived answer, rather than following through until you have accurate information.   Had you followed through until you actually found accurate information, I don't think you would be suggesting that the White Horse Pike may not have been in existence, and I don't think you would be scoffing at the idea of Crump having been familiar with the hunting around Clementon.  
« Last Edit: January 03, 2012, 10:53:50 PM by DMoriarty »
Golf history can be quite interesting if you just let your favorite legends go and allow the truth to take you where it will.
--Tom MacWood (1958-2012)

DMoriarty

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #188 on: January 03, 2012, 11:05:17 PM »
Here is a excerpt from Automobile Topics, May 21, 1910, about a planned "Motordrome."   The area hardly sounds isolated.

Clementon is ideally situated for such a project. It is just off the White Horse Pike which forms the main automobile road from Camden to Atlantic City and is on the line of both the Public Service trolley line and the main lines of the Pennsylvania Railroad and the Philadelphia and Reading Railway. There will thus be an abundance of methods of reaching the grounds, those who go by train or automobile making the trip from Philadelphia in twenty minutes while those who use the trolleys can get to the track in forty minutes.  The location is particularly advantageous for motorists as there are seven State roads leading into Clementon.
Golf history can be quite interesting if you just let your favorite legends go and allow the truth to take you where it will.
--Tom MacWood (1958-2012)

Patrick_Mucci

Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #189 on: January 04, 2012, 12:29:37 AM »
David,

Bryan appears to be selective in terms of what he posts.

Somehow the expression, the truth, the WHOLE truth and nothing but the truth, seems to have escaped him.

He has predetermined his conclusions and now posts to suit his agenda

DMoriarty

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #190 on: January 04, 2012, 12:58:23 AM »
Patrick, I don't believe Bryan would intentionally post false or misleading information and I hope I didn't imply otherwise. We have often disagreed but he's never been dishonest.  Same goes for Jim.
Golf history can be quite interesting if you just let your favorite legends go and allow the truth to take you where it will.
--Tom MacWood (1958-2012)

JESII

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #191 on: January 04, 2012, 09:52:16 AM »
David,

I'm sure you know I wasn't expecting, nor waiting, for your agreement as to the message Tom has been trying to send so let's agree to disagree. I "backed up my claims" as well as I'm interested in doing and I stand by them.

Simon Carr and Joseph Baker would have known this land had something to do with Crump's hunting history and yet they don't mention a word of it...they don't even imply it. Do they outright deny it? No. Why would they? It makes no difference if you and Tom "suspect" Baker was Shelley's source...Baker wrote his own story and made it clear the site was found during a concerted effort to find somewhere to build a golf course.

Brown was the President of the club for 50 years. Do you really think John Arthur Brown was referencing a mythological bogus story from a newspaper clipping that he stumbled upon? He pointed to the January 4th 1914 article as the best source. You can assume he and Shelley were looking at the same stuff but I don't think they came up with the same result.

DMoriarty

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #192 on: January 04, 2012, 02:26:55 PM »
David,

I'm sure you know I wasn't expecting, nor waiting, for your agreement as to the message Tom has been trying to send so let's agree to disagree. I "backed up my claims" as well as I'm interested in doing and I stand by them.

You and TomM disagree and that is to expected on a discussion group such as this one.  But nothing you have posted remotely backs up your claim that TomM fabricated Baker's support, or any of the other listed claims.  

Quote
http://Simon Carr and Joseph Baker would have known this land had something to do with Crump's hunting history and yet they don't mention a word of it...they don't even imply it. Do they outright deny it? No. Why would they? It makes no difference if you and Tom "suspect" Baker was Shelley's source...Baker wrote his own story and made it clear the site was found during a concerted effort to find somewhere to build a golf course.

I think you are confusing the absence of evidence with evidence of absence.  In other words, you have unrealistic expectations of what Carr and Baker ought to have said, and read way to much into their silence on the issue.

I also think you are reading things into Baker which are not necessarily there, but rather reflect your desired outcome.  In other words I don't think he "made it clear" that the Crump first became aware of this particular land during the "concerted effort to find somewhere to build a golf course."

Quote
Brown was the President of the club for 50 years. Do you really think John Arthur Brown was referencing a mythological bogus story from a newspaper clipping that he stumbled upon? He pointed to the January 4th 1914 article as the best source. You can assume he and Shelley were looking at the same stuff but I don't think they came up with the same result.

I don't think he knew it was mythological or bogus when he referenced it, but was going by the articles in PV's files. After all, he wasn't there, was he?    I think it was discovered to apocryphal later, which is why Shelly corrected the record.  

And I don't assume Brown and Shelly were looking at the same stuff.  I assume Shelly had access to whatever "records" Brown had, but that he also supplemented those with additional information.   Isn't that what Shelly suggests?  He wrote. ". . .there is proof that in fact Crump knew the grounds by tramping though them with his  gun and dogs while hunting . . .."    So either Brown missed this "proof," understood it differently, or Shelly had additional information.  

You attach great significance to Brown's longevity at the club.  Well, Shelly had been there since the late 1920's and had served on the Board for over 40 years.   So when he wrote that "there was proof" why don't you take that as seriously as Brown's intepretetation of unidentified records?
« Last Edit: January 04, 2012, 02:29:19 PM by DMoriarty »
Golf history can be quite interesting if you just let your favorite legends go and allow the truth to take you where it will.
--Tom MacWood (1958-2012)

Patrick_Mucci

Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #193 on: January 04, 2012, 02:29:15 PM »

There are many things we don't know.  One thing we do know is that the train story was published three times in 1913, in one newspaper and two magazines.  Of course we don't know if Crump read newspapers or magazines, so we don't know if he saw the three articles.


We also know, from one of the NGLA threads that newspapers and magazines often published articles by merely copying them and not verifying their accuracy.


Patrick_Mucci

Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #194 on: January 04, 2012, 02:49:57 PM »

Patrick, I don't believe Bryan would intentionally post false or misleading information and I hope I didn't imply otherwise.
We have often disagreed but he's never been dishonest.  

I'm not so sure.

Bryan posted the following in this thread:


Quote

Which roads were those?  
PV's property was initially land locked except for the RR.  
Do you know when the White Horse Pike was finished to Berlin?  
According to the Camden County Historical Society it was 1922.  But, what do they know?  
The trolleys stopped at Clementon and there were no roads from there to the property.


He knew that Berlin was further East than Clementon.
And, He knew that the Pike was a major thoroughfare.
Unfortunately, in another thread he posted the following which directly contradicts his position that there were no roads in Clementon in 1910-1912.



Quote
Seems that Virginia Ireland had the first car in the Pine Valley area around 1908 - a Stutz roadster.
[/u]


So, if Bryan stated that Virginia Ireland had the first car in the Pine Valley area around 1908, two to four years prior to 1910 and 1912, there must have been roads for her to drive it on.

She must have been able to garage the car at her home.  How did she get to and from her home in her Stutz Roadster if not on roads ?

Bryan misrepresented the state of transportation in and around Clementon/Pine Valley to suit his latest agenda and is a victim of his own prior posting.

You're free to draw your own conclusions, I've drawn mine.


Same goes for Jim.

Jim is merely suffering from exhaustion due to sleep deprevation.
I've never doubted his sincerity or honesty.

« Last Edit: January 04, 2012, 02:55:40 PM by Patrick_Mucci »

JESII

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #195 on: January 04, 2012, 03:53:32 PM »
Pat,

When was East Atlantic Avenue built?

The nearest the White Horse Pike gets to Pine Valley's property is 1.2 miles and on the 1898 topo the only road from that direction was the private road through the Sumner Ranch. You may recall that Pine Valley later acquired access to this road which means they did not have access prior. Clementon Park was built in 1907 or 1908...it's possible the road was built as access to the park from the Sumner/Pine Valley station but I wouldn't be sure of it...why get off at Sumner when you could get off in Clementon?

If they didn't drive through the Sumner property then the only way to get to Pine Valley would have been on the train...

JESII

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Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #196 on: January 04, 2012, 04:08:58 PM »
David,

I made my comments about Tom and his approach to this conversation and am willing to discuss them with him. I'm not going to discuss them with you.


Regarding Brown, I donlt attach any more significance to his longetivity at the club than I would Shelley. I'm responding to your implied lack of relevance of his comments because they came 50 years after the events. He said Crump's notes correspond to the January 4th 1914 article regarding the discovery. Shelley did not reference notes, he referenced "press clippings at the time". Why would the AWT story make it into any club records if it was a myth?

Tom MacWood

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Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #197 on: January 04, 2012, 04:53:59 PM »
David,

I made my comments about Tom and his approach to this conversation and am willing to discuss them with him. I'm not going to discuss them with you.


Regarding Brown, I donlt attach any more significance to his longetivity at the club than I would Shelley. I'm responding to your implied lack of relevance of his comments because they came 50 years after the events. He said Crump's notes correspond to the January 4th 1914 article regarding the discovery. Shelley did not reference notes, he referenced "press clippings at the time". Why would the AWT story make it into any club records if it was a myth?

Jim
You are either a very confused person, or desperate, or both. That is not what Brown said. Do you have Brown's book?


JESII

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #198 on: January 04, 2012, 05:03:47 PM »
I do not have the book. What do you think I'm missing?

DMoriarty

  • Karma: +0/-0
Re: The Story of the Discovery of the Pine Valley Property
« Reply #199 on: January 04, 2012, 05:16:31 PM »
David,

I made my comments about Tom and his approach to this conversation and am willing to discuss them with him. I'm not going to discuss them with you.

No offense Jim, but you can continue to discuss whatever you like with whomever you like, and I will continue to comment as I like as well.  As I see it, your own claims do not hold up to anything near the critical scrutiny you place others, and the same goes for Bryan.

Quote
Regarding Brown, I donlt attach any more significance to his longetivity at the club than I would Shelley. I'm responding to your implied lack of relevance of his comments because they came 50 years after the events.

I am not sure what my "implied lack of relevance" means but I suspect you misunderstood me.  I never said his comments were irrelevant.  They are relevant, but to me they appear to be largely derived from the AWT articles. The 50 years comments were specifically addressing your claims;  so far as I know AWT was the only one espousing his view for 50 years, which makes his view rather isolated view in my book, or at least it was for for 50 years.    


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He said Crump's notes correspond to the January 4th 1914 article regarding the discovery.


1. Brown did NOT say that "Crump's notes correspond with the January 4th 1914 article regarding the discovery."  
2. Brown didn't link Crump's records (whatever those were) to either version of the discovery story.
3. Brown did not say anything about "notes" at all!  
4. All Brown said about "Crump's old records" is that they "indicate his interest in the property and the possibility, as he saw it, for the development of the most interesting inland golf course under seaside conditions, as the property at one time had been covered by ocean."   Where in this did Brown say that Crump's notes correspond with the January 1914 article?  

This is precisely the sort of thing I am talking about.  You expect others to speak in absolute truths always, yet you throw throw stuff out there like this as if it were a fact when it is not.  Your statement is NOT supported by the record.  

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Shelley did not reference notes, he referenced "press clippings at the time".
Well Brown didn't reference notes either?  So what is your point exactly?   You are acting as if you know that "club records" means some contemporaneously written account specifically describing the discovery story, but you do not know that, and it is highly unlikely!    It would be wonderful if such records existed, but I suspect they do not exist. If they did, then Brown and Shelly wouldn't be singing different tunes.    In reality, neither of us knows what these "records" were, and they could well be nothing but old newspaper articles kept by the club.  

You read more into the potential of these records than I do.  Had they contained the type of information you suspect they contain, then Shelly should have been singing a different tune.  

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Why would the AWT story make it into any club records if it was a myth?

Do you really think it unusual that a club would save old clippings about the club?   If they did save clippings, do you really think they would thoroughly vet these already published articles for detailed accuracy, and purge their files of any that did not pass muster?  Merion's club secretary held onto hundreds of old newspaper clippings about Merion.  Do you think that we can take everything in all those newspaper clippings as factually accurate just because Merion's secretary chose to save them?  
Golf history can be quite interesting if you just let your favorite legends go and allow the truth to take you where it will.
--Tom MacWood (1958-2012)