Since this path has been taken again, the following are my thoughts as well as my hopes and wishes for this particular subject and the path it takes on this DG heretofore. If there is anything at all unreasonable in the following I must say I am at a total loss to see or tell what it could be:
I think Merion East might be a great example, perhaps one of the best early examples, of what-all was meant back then by "laying out" whether on the ground or on a pre-construction or even pre-routing topographical contour map or BOTH simultaneously.
Why do I say this? Because first of all Merion East in 1911 is the first golf course I'm aware of where it can be virtually proven that the architects were using a topographical contour map to route and create golf holes (although it has not been found in many, many decades there is ample evidence from numerous sources that it was produced at the time the Wilson Committee got going with attempting to route and create a golf course at Ardmore).*
Furthermore, with Merion East this assumption or supposition that the course had been routed in 1910 by Macdonald/Whigam and Horatio Gates Lloyd and Richard Francis, both of Merion, (to wit; see the conclusions of the IMO piece "The Missing Faces of Merion") at least to anything close to the routing and course that was actually approved on April 19, 1911 and created in 1911 is simply that----an assumption or supposition---- neither of which has come close to being proven or shown to be credible by actual contemporaneous facts or evidence. However, even given the foregoing, I see the author of that IMO piece is still trying to suggest such a thing on this thread.
This author has stated on numerous preceding threads on Merion and again on this particular thread (four years after the IMO piece was placed on this website) that he does not want to digress and reargue old points!
And why not? Is he afraid someone or something will appear in the form of a credible argument that will look to others to prove or even suggest his conclusions in that IMO piece to be incorrect?
At the very least he should list for this website the documents and historical assets he DID NOT HAVE when he produced that IMO piece in 2008!! I think they are extremely important because they state things that were contemporaneous to the time period he was writing about that he was clearly not aware of when he wrote that IMO piece. I would even venture to say that if I had what he did when he wrote that piece (an unfortunately limited and incomplete amount of contemporaneous documents and information), I too may've come to some of the same conclusions he did in that 2008 IMO piece.
But more was found and produced later that bears very directly on this story and on the attribution of the architecture of the course. Did Macdonald and Whigam aid and assist Merion (MCC) in this project? Yes they did and the MCC records state what they did do for MCC. Do any Merion (MCC) documents state at any time that Wilson and his committee merely constructed the golf course to Macdonald/Whigam's (Lloyd and Francis) routing and design plans (or HH Barker’s) as that IMO piece assumes and concludes? No they do not---not at any time or in any place in any of the contemporaneous records; again, all they state is that CBM/Whigam aided and assisted MCC and the Wilson Committee with their plans on two separate occasions---eg late June 1910 to discuss the potential of the Ardmore site for a golf course and on April 6, 1911 to essentially go over the five different plans the Wilson Committee had developed at that point.
And what about the Wilson Committee trip to NGLA in the first half of March 1911? The committee report to the Merion Board meeting of April 19, 1911 states clearly what they did with Macdonald and Raynor during those two days at NGLA and it says nothing at all that I've ever been able to see about them spending time up there developing the routing or design plans for Merion East. They certainly may’ve done so but the fact is the best contemporaneous report (the committee report to the Board meeting of April 19, 1911 in which the committee submitted a proposed routing (design?) plan to be considered and approved by Merion’s Board of Directors) just does not state that or anything like that (interestingly it does state what they did do at NGLA the first evening and the following day. Another document by Wilson to someone else also elaborates on their discussion on agronomy while at NGLA in early March 1911).
I would like to see the author of that IMO piece (The Missing Faces of Merion) at least state and admit here and now that when he wrote that piece he did not have at his disposal a number of very important documents and information that bears directly on this story and attribution;
1/ That seminal letter Macdonald wrote to the Merion Site Committee in June 1910 that clearly states he could not say much without a topographical contour map and that it was up to the Committee to find eighteen classical golf holes on that site.
2/ The Committee report to the Merion Board on April 19, 1911.
Since he did not have those important documents, (and a number of others that were found by others and revealed later which can be listed subsequent to this), when he wrote that IMO piece in 2008 it certainly appears to me he has tried for the last four years to sort of back his original assumptions and conclusion into the discussion of this subject apparently only for the purpose of somehow trying to defend those assumptions and conclusion in that IMO piece. Perhaps the most humorous and ironical example of him trying to defend his IMO piece’s assumptions and conclusion at all cost, is when he actually stated on this website after being shown what that committee report to the Board Meeting of April 19, 1911 actually said-----eg. that what it actually said and meant was not what everyone who was ever aware of it or read it thought it said and meant-----and further to that-----that it took him (the author of that IMO piece) to interpret it properly and to finally explain to everyone almost a century later what it actually did say and mean!!
There are a number of other important documents and information the author did not have when he wrote that IMO piece in 2008 but the first two above would be a good start for an intelligent and accurate discussion on this subject going forward. It would be a good start at least if he would admit he did not have those two documents listed above and what they said and revealed that he was unaware of when he wrote that IMO piece in 2008. With a good new start like this one here, we can go on and list some other important documents and information from MCC's archives he did not have when he wrote that essay and what not having them may’ve meant to his assumptions and conclusion in that IMO piece.
I just cannot see why this exercise would not be a good one to go through for all interested in Merion which seems to be a lot since this subject certainly has been the most notable one GOLFCLUBATLAS.com has ever generated.
One way or another, and whether on GOLFCLUBATLAS.com or on some other entity, this is going to be revealed and discussed and this is a good time to start with the US Open year of Merion about to happen.
*The first provable example of a topographical contour map I have ever actually seen that was used in the development of a routing and the creation of golf holes is ironically Pine Valley. However, it certainly sounds to me as if Macdonald/Raynor were using one in 1906 or 1907 with the routing and hole development of NGLA but it also has not been found. It also sounds to me like they were using one with the routing and design development of Piping Rock which may've begun as early as 1910 and at least by 1911 (from CBM's book). Frankly, after just reviewing Macdonald's book for about the hundreth time it seems he suggested that with all other courses he was involved with following NGLA (every one of them with Raynor) he used a topographical contour map from the very beginning of each project! Others have claimed various courses before this that may've used this type of topographical contour map to route and design a golf course but as far as I can tell it has never been actually PROVED to be the case as with Merion East and Pine Valley and/or BEFORE them.