Hmm, I was negligent with this thread...apologies!
Thanks Sven!
Have you come across any more information on Travis' involvement with P2?
Mr. Crosby I don't think anybody really knows exactly what Travis' input was. That is, it's a mystery. We sometimes try to figure out how courses happened on GCA and it's fun to do but when some of the historic pathways cannot be entirely and precisely discerned that's perfectly fine with me.
You can read Travis' entire version of the early work on the course here (about halfway down the page):
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/the-early-days-of-pinehurst-pg-4/When were the current 4th and 5th hole corridors built?
1928
Could you also post the final version and cite the year in which it became set in cement.
Patrick, the current routing was somewhere between '33 and '36. How do we know this? No. 5 Course was used as an archery course in 1933. The 1936 PGA was played on today's route. Ergo...
Ross actually played archery golf - at least a little bit. He was probably obliged to for the health of the resort in tough times. I doubt he wanted to.
For various reasons a lot of attention will be paid to the 5th hole this year. Most won't realize it was actually part of an entirely different course or that the dignified designer once trotted around it with a bow and a quiver full of arrows.
BTW, the 5th hole was a par-5 until 1949. That was the year they changed it to a par-4. It is what it's always been - a half par hole. If someone made the grievous error of having me design a course I can guarantee you one of the first things I'd be doing is to try to identify land which naturally lent itself to being a hole of indeterminate par - preferably a reachable, ego boosting par-5. People get beaten up all the time on courses. Why not design at least a few holes which evoke the opposite feeling in the player?
Did he continue to make changes AFTER the sand greens were installed in 1935, or was the course complete once they were?
I can't give you a definitive answer on that Tom. My opinion is that Ross was an inveterate or compulsive tinkerer. I think any time he walked any course his mind worked in such a way that it automatically (and rapidly) pictured how it could be improved. The fact that this capability was applied to No. 2 for almost
half a century is the primary reason the course is what it is.
So, in answer to your question, I would suppose he continued to do some refining - but not major changes.
The year before they installed the grass greens they did a test run on the first three greens of No. 2. Only, they kept the sand greens that year, as well. That is, when you played the course for that season - and that season only - you'd find two greens to aim for on the first three holes.