I'm not trying to be argumentative, but I'm not sure why it matters whether Bush wrote down something he remembered informally or if it was an official "record" of the Club (there seems to be some discussion whether it's a "recollection" or something in the records).
For what it is worth, I do take
Bush at face value. But Bush did not write anything about who laid out the initial course. The reason the mistake is significant is that Weeks would have known who the Club Secretary was had he actually been looking at the club records, and he would have known that Bush's snippet was not an administrative record. It is also significant because it strongly suggests that Weeks was really confused about what was going on here.
Now Joe Bausch tells us that the Run Book had been lost, and while he has not yet confirmed that the records were lost for 1894 in particular, it nonetheless looks more and more like Weeks was NOT relying on club records as the basis of his narrative about AM&G.
If he was an early member of the Club, wouldn't anything he wrote down or relayed be pretty compelling, no matter what the format? I suppose you could contend that he may be "misremembering" details if he wrote them down years later, but I think something as big as who designed the course would stick with an early member.
Again, I do take what Bush wrote at face value. But no one has brought anything forward indicating that Bush even addressed who created the course.
Generally, I wouldn't be so quick to assume that these guys would definitely remember, because don't think these guys were all that concerned with who designed their courses. They apparently did not see these things as significant or permanent like we do today. There was no concept of the "design" of a course like there is today. Take a look at the Shinnecock thread for a key example. Parrish was the Club Secretary and actually with Willie Davis when they located the land for the Shinnecock course. And, while with Davis, Parrish even hit the first golf ball at the location. Yet he wrongly attributed the initial course to Willie Dunn, and wrote that the initial course was a 12 hole course, apparently confusing the original nine hole course with Dunn's 12 hole course from 1893.
I can understand why you may dismiss Weeks account, since he wasn't there and would depend on sources. But since Bush was there, wouldn't any form of his recollection be important?
Again, I do take what Bush wrote at face value, even where he is a bit confusing. But no one has brought anything forward indicating that Bush even addressed who created the course.
Looked at another way, isn't a newspaper account just a write-up of someone's recollection? I'm assuming the writers received their information from a member, rather than a review of club records.
I am not sure "recollection" is the correct word since those articles appeared in conjunction with the opening tournament. Yes the information likely came from a member, but it had just happened and was likely fresh in the member's mind. It wasn't mixed up with all of what else happened regarding the course for the next decade or so. Plus, the main article contains plenty of information suggesting the person supplying the information knew what he/she was talking about.
_______________
Having said all that, I'm trying to remember what, exactly, is attributed to Bush's recollection. There's reference to his short entry that the Executive Committee decided in March 1894 to build a golflinks on the Myopia ground (which doesn't prove who actually made the layout), but what else is specifically attributed to Bush's recollections?
“At a meeting of the Executive Committee about March 1894 it was decided to build a golf links on the Myopia Grounds. Accordingly, the grounds 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 about June 1, 1894.”I don't recall anything else from Bush of direct significance to the creation of the course having been brought forward. That little blip seems to be the basis for Weeks' claims and the basis for the alternate "theory" that and Weeks' narrative about AMG are the only "support" for the claim that AMG were responsible. This complete lack of support is why I find this conversation frustrating. There is just nothing there.
That is why I keep trying to get a list of facts. So far as I can tell, there is NOTHING which points to AM&G as the creators of the course.
________________________________
Mike Cirba tries to downplay Weeks error by noting that Weeks was the secretary of the golf committee. But Weeks reported that Bush was the one keeping the club records! That is the job of the Secretary of the Club.
____________________________________
Mike Cirba. I thought you were done trying to inject NGLA into this discussion? You've repeatedly and mistakenly tried to rewrite NGLA's history even though it is well documented, so I have know idea what other histories of CBM's courses you might decide to distort. You still owe us an explanation about your hypocrisy.
What else about the Weeks book makes you think that the had the Run Book for 1894?