Mike Cirba.
I am not forgetting about the sod at all. I am also not forgetting that reportedly the conditions were so rough that some of the membership objected to playing on the sodded course.
David,
God love you, but you sure have an interesting way of interpreting the English language.
The sentence in question is;
"Accordingly the ground were examined, and in opposition from a number of members because the ground was so rough, nine greens were sodded and cut and play began around June 1st, 1894."
I'm not sure how you derived the membership complaining about poor, bumpy putting on the new greens from that sentence, because clearly the "opposition" was about something else entirely.
It's clear that "despite the opposition, the greens were sodded and cut", with the expense that entailed, as well as the setting aside of significant club acreage and riding areas for the purpose of playing the new game.
In the preceding paragraphs, Weeks tells us more about the "opposition".
"At both The Country Club and Myopia there was opposition, not to say derision, from the horse lovers: at Clyde Park idiots intent "on chasing a Quinine pill around a cow pasture," as Finley Peter Dunne put it, were warned not to foul up the race course; at Hamilton they were not to interfere with the Hunt!"
"It was fortunate that the man who suggested golf at Myopia was the newly elected Master of the Fox Hounds, R. M. Appleton. Bud Appleton was the indispensable go-between, so popular that he could placate the Hunt and practical enough not to minimize the difficulties. When the snows melted in the spring of 1894, Appleton, with two fellow members, "Squire" Merrill, and A. P. Gardner, footed it over the Club acres, spotting the tees and pacing off the distance to provisional greens, probably marking them with pegs. The opponents had protested that the ground was rough and the soil thin, both of which in part were true."
Later he writes;
"The feeling that golf was an unworthy intrusion was widespread and would not subside for years; the horsey members kept to one part of the Club and the golfers in their plus fours to another. A member of the Hunt, when asked if they really had a golf course at Myopia, replied: "I believe some do play a game of that name around here".
Like most people trying to stop something they don't agree with, the "opponents" of golf at Myopia seem to have objected to the game out of principle, and apparently found any reason to argue against it.
Thankfully, they didn't hold sway.