"I understand he was involved with a few projects. I call them few, because, compared to Donald Ross's 42 courses in one of those early 1920 years, it seems a pittance.
My posit, and it isn't fact, is that he was not happy with the way things worked out with American golf. After learning the finer points directly from Old Tom, and seeing a disregard for what he may have felt as core, and becoming frustrated and ultimately depressed, he might have only been persuaded to do a few projects by a few passionate individuals, who saw eye to eye on these finer points.
I admit it's a lot of assumptions on my part, but seems like a natural reaction to being ignored. Also, I'm not just referring to his architectural involvement, but also in the organization he started."
Adam:
I agree with you; particularly your second and third paragraphs. However, as we both seem to recognize those kinds of things are just not easy to track and analyze as they were never chronicled at the time in somethng like a biography. The best we can find today is Macdonald's own virtual golf autobiography, "Scotland's Gift Golf" and the occasional references to some other things in his life as these so-called "Agronomy Letters" that refer to him now and then, or even something like the situation that took place with The Creek Club in 1926.
However, even if it probably greatly surprises us today about a man who died 71 years ago there are still a few people around who knew him and remember him quite well and then of course there are all the old "one off" stories about him that are still mentioned today around there. There were a number of men (and women) from that age and the next generation around that area in golf who surely were memorable and obviously Charlie was one of them.
There was one around there who was a prominent member of all the CBM clubs of Long Island that I remember well, who if a movie was made of CBM I would've definitely cast him in the starring roll as CBM. He was the inimitable, and sometimes larger than life, James "Jimmy" Knott!! It was so ironic to me when I went down to Swede's auto repair shop in Southampton which is a virtual shrine to CBM and NGLA, Swede spoke of Knott as if he were the second coming of Macdonald himself.