Another case where it would be nice to see a contemporaneous account of Ross' involvement.
If you go to the course's online history page (
https://www.mingosprings.com/about-us), you can read about the 1920's advent of the Rangeley Lakes Country Club 9 hole course and the nearby 9 holes at the Mingo Springs Hotel. This page also discusses plans for an additional 9 holes for the Rangeley Lakes Country Club course that were never realized. Both of these courses seemingly survived into the 1960's when they were combined as one 18 hole unit to preserve them from the threats of development. That is the Mingo Springs GC that exists today.
From this account, it would appear that both nines at the current Mingo Springs predate the 1932 date for a new course cited in the article Mike posted. But that story doesn't really match up with the newspaper accounts.
It probably makes sense to gather everything we have on the history of golf in Rangeley to try to decipher this one.
Rangeley Lake Hotel Golf Course (aka Rangeley GC and Rangeley Lake Hotel Golf Links)1877 - Hotel built
1895 - Hotel moved and expanded
1898 - Course built (Nov. 5, 1898 Sun-Journal)
1899 Official Golf Guide - notes the course as in existence
[IMG width =400]https://hosting.photobucket.com/images/cc435/snilsen7/Rangeley_Lake_Hotel_Golf_Links_-_Official_Golf_Guide_1899.png?width=1920&height=1080&fit=bounds1900 Brooks Brothers Golf Guide - notes the course as in existence
1916 - 1938 - noted in the various Annual Guides during this period as a 9 hole course.
1958 - Property razed after hotel was closed for World War II and purchased by Sheraton in 1946
I suspect (but haven't confirmed) that the course was also known as the Oquossoc GC, which is noted in the 1900 Harpers as a 6 hole course laid out by A. H. Fenn and was noted in an April 2, 1899 Boston Globe article as having been organized in 1898 with a 6 hole course.
Map of the course from 1922 -
From the map of the course it is evident this course was located on the lake shore in what today is the town of Rangeley a bit east of the location of Mingo Springs GC. This is the first course noted in the 1952 article.
Mingo Springs GCNot noted in any of the 1925, 1926, 1927, 1928, 1929 or 1931 Annual Guides.
1938 Golf Guide - noted as a 9 hole 3,050 yard course with a date of organization of 1924.
The first mention in the newspapers I can find for this course is in 1924.
Rangeley Lakes Country ClubThe club is note mentioned in any of the Annual Guides. The first mention I can find of this club is the sale of land from Mingo Springs Inc. to the club in 1931. An Aug. 10, 1932 Sun-Journal article notes this as a new course.
A Sept. 5, 1933 Bangor Daily News article notes this course as one of 14 18 hole courses in Maine. A series of articles from later in the 1930's and the early 1940's note the 54 hole Rangeley Open which had 18 holes of play on each of the three courses noted here (the articles do not mention if the courses where of 9 or 18 holes at that time.
SummaryThere were clearly three separate courses in Rangeley. What is unclear is when the third course was built. From the contemporaneous accounts it would appear that the Rangeley Lakes CC course was built in the early 1930's, which doesn't match the historical description of today's Mingo Springs GC. It is also uncertain to me whether or note the Rangeley Lakes CC course ever had 18 holes, or if the description of the 18 hole course was noting a combination of the two adjacent courses.
It is possible that Donald Ross was involved with the construction of this course, but it would be nice to see something from that time period confirming the information in the 1952 article. At this point in his career, almost all of his activities were reported in the press. Perhaps something will pop up to shed some more light.
Sven