Although his original focus and primary research subject was CBM, it would appear that one of George’s most enduring achievements was that he rescued Seth Raynor’s life’s work from obscurity...
I don't log on to GCA nearly as much as I used to, so I was shocked and saddened to see that George had passed away recently. A phone conversation with George years ago, and his generosity and enthusiasm in sharing his research, made a huge impression on me. That conversation, the only interaction I ever had with him other than a couple emails, remains one of the most fun, intellectually stimulating things I’ve ever experienced.
Having lived on the property and worked at Yeamans Hall for two years, and perhaps because it was the first REALLY good golf course that I had regular access to, I have always had a great affection for Raynor's style, and an enduring fascination with the mystery surrounding his life and work.
I contacted George several years ago regarding two things, a trip I made to Blowing Rock GC specifically to see if there was any trace of Raynor's work left there, and a long-lost nine hole course from the mid-to-late 20's that sat upon what is now Dunes West GC in Mt. Pleasant (one old green site can be seen on the drive in). We spent almost three hours talking about what I had found in Blowing Rock (at least 6 holes sitting alone, overgrown, and left out of the current configuration) and he excitedly pointed out that the photos I forwarded him possibly revealed Eden, Short, and Punchbowl green sites. The connection between Raynor-through Macdonald's NY friends and what was then an extremely remote part of my home region in Western North Carolina was a mystery that I couldn't resist. The club suffered a clubhouse fire in the 1950's, and lost a great deal of it's history. For years, the club listed Donald Ross as the architect, but the Tuft Archives list Ross's involvement ending well before Raynor's engagement by a new owner of the Green Park Inn-who just happened to be a golf crony of CBM back in New York. This association also led to the nine-hole Statesville CC being built with sand greens sometime later-a club which still exists but with a different, modern golf course. It would appear that Raynor's involvement at Green Park was not a complete re-do of Ross's work, but an addition of nine holes, most of which were then altered to varying degrees and then completely left out of a re-do by someone (Tom Jackson?) in the 80's. I don’t know if he ever had any conversations with the club…but George was reasonably convinced that they, at some point, possessed at least nine holes designed by Raynor-and that some of them, while not in the current routing, still existed as of March 2004.
The conversation eventually drifted away from Blowing Rock/Green Park, and in the course of the next couple hours, we discussed how he taught himself to conduct research-using things I had never even suspected might be useful in identifying the original designer of a course, such as a Depression-era US Geological Survey that included airplane-photography, and what he referred to as the local “hysterical” society. Over the course of that conversation, George shared with me that he suspected that Raynor was involved with far, far more projects than had ever been documented. Although he didn’t mention any specifically, I suppose that some of them are among those that have been discussed here on GCA in the past decade. I was particularly fascinated by a couple of courses built for individuals/families. He mentioned one that sits overgrown on an estate somewhere in New York (Long Island?) inhabited only by a single, very old lady, who would not permit anyone access to the property to check it out! He also mentioned a course built in a very remote location for the Fleischman(?) family somewhere in remote upstate NY.
I can remember working the bag drop at my first club in NC, and seeing a “Friends of Seth Raynor” bag tag. When I asked the owner (who was a 20-year member of Yeamans) who Seth Raynor was, he replied “…I dunno, I think he might have been the old pro there or something…” I can’t imagine that scene happening anywhere, ever again. I suppose George’s planned Raynor book took a back seat to his involvement at Old Macdonald and then his illness – but I am curious – given the examples of Green Park/Blowing Rock and more recently Sunningdale and North Shore – what more is out there yet to discover? And by whom?