Can you specify who "thought/think it (Merion's routing) brilliant."
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I'll mention just one person who thought the original plan was pretty darn good. C. B. Macdonald.
After helping develop the plan, and after he and HJ Whigham had determined the final layout plan from a number of options, CB Macdonald reportedly told Merion's Golf Committee that if Merion
"would lay it out according to the plan they approved, which [was] submitted [to Merion's Board], that it would result not only in a first class course, but that the last seven holes would be equal to any inland course in the world."Remind you of anything? Reminds me of the CBM passage you kept bringing up earlier . . . the one where in 1927 CBM was bragging about how
Yale was "unexcelled in comparison with any inland course” in the world. Wasn't your argument that if CBM had planned Merion, then he'd have spoken similarly about about Merion? Well he did.
As for the crossovers, the original 13th green to the 14th tee didn't really "crossover" the original 1st tee. The joke at that time was that the route from the 13th green (which was well behind the clubhouse) to the 14th was through the clubhouse bar. Since CB Macdonald is rumored to have been fond of a drink now and then, perhaps this is yet another CBM tell?
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. . . you have no idea what he or Hugh Wilson contributed to the initial routing.
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Jim, I agree that I have little definite knowledge of who did what,
exactly, but NO ONE ELSE DOES EITHER. That is part of my point!
None of these modern commentators have any idea what of anything Wilson contributed to the original layout plan as approved by CBM and Whigham. They are just parroting the Legend.
As far as
general involvement with the routing process, with regard to Wilson, we know very little. In contrast, with CB Macdonald we know quite a lot.
For example, by April 1911 CB Macdonald and HJ Whigham had been helping Merion figure out how to fit the holes for over 9 months.
The previous June CBM/HJW had inspected the property and discussed with Merion what could be done with their land, and they were already considering "the most difficult problem" of "how to get in eighteen holes that will be first class" on the property. CBM thought the holes could fit, but couldn't provide a plan at this point because
Merion did not yet have a contour map. Additionally, CBM spent two days at NGLA going over CBM's plans and further advising Merion on the layout plan, and that those suggestions were of the greatest help and value to Merion. CBM and HJW then returned to Merion a few weeks later to go over the various options (the "five plans") and to determine and approve a final plan.
So while we can only guess at specifics, we know quite a lot about CBM's involvement in the planning process.
Judging from Merion's Minutes, CBM and HJW not only helped developed the layout plan, but Merion gave CBM and HJW final approval of the layout plan!
Am I wrong about this? According to the Minutes, who had final say over the plan? Wilson or CBM?
Land selection. You credit CBM with identifying the most suitable land for theur course. This was the only parcel they showed him.
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First, it isn't me who credited CBM/HJW. It was Lesley's Committee and Merion's Board. They reported that their decision to purchase the parcel was "based largely" on CBM/HJW's opinion "as to what could be done with the land." Second, the value of their advice was not in picking the land from among other parcels, it was in
determining that eighteen first class holes could fit on the parcel in question. (Plus the additional land they recommended.) This would have necessarily required some idea of the routing.
Routing. While we don't know much at all about this overall, we do know that Richard Francis found the way to fit the last five holes.
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I've always acknowledged the Francis contribution.