Peter,
Sorry I haven't addressed your post in due order.
Upfront, let me just say that I don't agree that the "five different plans" discussion gets to the heart of the matter. The tendency when we look at this information is to take each little snippet and analyze the hell out of it as if it were going to answer all our questions. The reality is that this was a long process, and the "five different plans" is just one fragment of many, one piece of the puzzle, and
it must be considered with all that came before and after.
It doesn't make sense to try and build a wall between what they were doing at NGLA (and before) and what they were doing at Merion "upon their return." This was a process that had been ongoing since the previous summer!
1) It's clear that CBM approved the final plan; but, since its quite unusual for anyone to approve his own work,
First, it wasn't just "his own work." Those from Merion almost certainly must have contributed as well. I have always acknowledged that.
Second, it is NOT at all unusual for
the person in charge to have final approval over a project to which many others have also contributed. It happens all the time in law, in writing, in architecture, and in any creative profession and/or creative process where a number of individuals are contributing but only one of the contributors has final say over the project! He had final say. Or final approval.
Third, We don't have to rely on this sort of semantical nitpicking. We have additional information, and we know they helped develop the project. CBM/HJW had long been helping with the plan starting the summer before, and Merion had been relying on their advice which was of "greatest help and value." It doesn't seem reasonable to write them out of a 9 month process because of your conjecture about how the word "approved" might have been used at the culmination of a long, complicated process.
I have to assume that Wilson and the Committee must've been largely responsible for developing those 5 plans. (Yes, they had already recieved advice and guidance from CBM at that point; but if CBM had been instrumental in developing those plans, why would he have had anything to 'approve'? Presumably he would have simply presented, as the best one, the one he thought the best, and not have to decide/approve that post facto)
At the very least he decided between the "various plans." If he had only "approved" the plan in the sense of a rubber stamp, then how did he go from five plans to one? Doesn't deciding between the plans cut against your understanding of "approve?"
And, respectfully, I don't think your assumption is supported by the totality of the record. In my opinion:
1. You are reading way too much into what you think they might have meant "approved."
2. You are not adequately considering the 9 month process up to that point.
Remember, before the NGLA meeting CBM/HJW had already been over the land and considering how the holes would fit, and unlike the summer before,
Merion now had a contour map. Given we know they were planning at Merion, it seems unreasonable to then turn around and say that the plans laid out after NGLA were independently created.
2) While 'the legend' assumes/accepts much without a great deal of documentation to back it up, I think similarly there is no documentation (that I have seen) to suggest that those five plans were, as you opine, more akin to 'variations' of a basic routing than to different routings. You may well be right -- but I think you would say (have already said) we simply don't know that for a fact.
I have said that we don't know for certain. But I view the "five totally independent routings" theory to be very unlikely for a host of reasons. I don't think it matters much in this context, so I'll mention just one. The actual quote is: "Upon our return, we
rearranged the course and laid out five different plans."
There was one "course" but multiple plans. This to me suggests options vs. wholly distinct routings.
But as I said, I don't think it matters much in this context. No matter the degree of independence in the plans, they had just been planning the layout at NGLA with CBM and HJW! And if the plans were very different, then wouldn't this make CBM's choice between them all that more significant?
[By the way, keep in mind that when Lesley used the phrase "to lay out" in that passage, he was referring to laying it out on the ground. (
"if we would lay it out according to the plan they approved . . .") They were laying out the plans on the ground, but they weren't necessarily the ones who came up with the plans.]
In short, it seems that, IF those 5 plans were 'variations' on a theme, then CBM is certainly due more credit for the design than he's been traditionally given; but if those plans were actually different routings (and, as I suggest above, largely developed by Wilson and the Commitee, to then be approved by CBM) then the traditional credit as 'advisor' is probably pretty accurate.
You lose me here. Whether they were variations or distinct plans, they were still just at NGLA working on the layout, and CBM had still played a major role in choosing the land, etc.
For all we know he could have handed them five different plans at NGLA and said "lay them out at Merion and I'll be down in a few weeks to pick the best one."
This theory requires EXACTLY the same amount of speculation as your theory. It may require less speculation because at least it doesn't discount/ignore NGLA.
I am not saying this happened, but it is no more speculative than your version, is it?