Glad you guys finally "discovered" Golfer's Magazine on the Hathitrust website. That is where i have been getting those photos I have been posting. Many or all of the photos in this 1916 article are actually from 1914 or earlier, but there are some pics from 1916 in other issues.
I love the photo of the bunker on the 14th on the West course. (In fact I emailed it along with some questions to Jim Sullivan last month.) Is this the sort of primitive bunkering you guys think existed early on at Merion? Because that bunker looks pretty cool to me.
Not sure why Joe is bothering to watermark a public domain article from the internet, but for those that want to read the article or copy the photos without Joe's annoying watermark, here is the link:
http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nyp.33433066624200;view=1up;seq=148And here is link to an issue from the actual tournament, with some of the photos I've posted (some of which are mislabeled in the article.)
http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nyp.33433066624200;view=1up;seq=317===============================================================
Joe, that pretty well says it all. Wilson was largely responsible, with assistance from both his committee and advisors CBM and HJW. Just another example of how most documents were worded back in those days, and when enough of them say it, maybe we just ought to believe them. I guess we will probably hear that Evans is a liar or has it wrong.......
Jeff, as for your last sentence, why would you write such incendiary crap?
Unlike your buddies in Philadelphia, I've never once called anyone with actual knowledge of what happened at Merion "a liar." I am no Mike Cirba, who has repeatedly called H.J. Whigham, a "liar," a
"F*cking Liar," and worse. Your friends not only call Whigham a "f*cking liar," they don't even believe Hugh Wilson himself when he describes his lack of qualifications previous to meeting Macdonald! Nor do they believe Findlay when he indicated that Macdonald was responsible for much or all of the layout. Hell, they don't even believe Merion's own minutes! Yet I am the one who is calling people liars? That is
rich.
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As for the article itself, there is probably a good reason why the wording looks so familiar to Jeff. Sections of the article are largely derivative of the Lesley article authored in 1914, and other Evan's articles which have been quoted here extensively. Even many of the photographs are taken directly from that Lesley article. So it ought not surprise anyone that Evans describes Macdonald's and Whigham's involvement same as did Lesley. While some on the other side seem to think so, repeating the same basic statements by the same people over and over again does not constitute an accumulation of evidence.
Besides, I seem to have missed what it is in this article that Jeff thinks is so damning. So far as Evans knew, the actual East course was "largely the work" of Wilson and his committee. Wilson was after all charged with laying the course out on the ground according to the plan approved by Macdonald and Whigham. So what? What if anything does this tell us about who came up with the plan?
It may be notable, though, that over
five years after Whigham and Macdonald had been involved, whoever was feeding Evans this information still saw fit to credit them right along with Wilson and the Committee. Or, as I said, the information may have simply come from the Lesley article.
One other thing of note. Evans seems to be somewhat ambiguous as to who was chair of the Green Committee at Merion in 1916. Either that or he seems to think that Wilson and Sargent were co chairs. In one article he refers to both Sargent in Wilson as chairs, and in this one he indicates that both are "the directing forces" on the green committee.