"While I know you two have generally disagreed on who deserves more credit for PV generally, I don't recall there being much debate on the interpretation of the evidence on a hole by hole basis.
Did I miss something?"
Mike:
Yes, you probably did miss something. A lot of people probably did. But the real deal is the essential "timeline" of the creation of Pine Valley makes what happened hole by hole and who specifically did what and when pretty clear.
In that vein that timeline is sort of remarkable for a specific reason and that is we really do know (it's documented) what Crump did BEFORE Colt first arrived and it is also documented what Crump did that departed from anything Colt recommended or left as a plan AFTER Colt left and never returned. If that had not happened in that particular way (basically the fact that Colt only made a single site visit to PV) the timeline would inherently be much more complicated to decipher and assign attribution.
And it goes further. We have what Crump did before Colt arrived and we can compare that to the way the course turned out and we have what Colt left (as a plan) when he was there that single time and we can also compare that to the way the course turned out in the years after he left for the final time and we can consequently track all the differences between Colt's plan and the way the course turned out. Again, if Colt had come back for numerous site visits this entire timeline and what it says would be much more complicated.
I mean someone like Paul Turner can argue that the way the fairways and bunkers turned out at Pine Valley were on Colt's plan but I feel anyone can see they really aren't and there are many and general differences. And not just that but the vast difference between Colt's blue lines and Crump's red lines (basically bunkering) tell that story in specific detail. Also Colt never provided green designs in the plans he left except general outlines which don't really match some of the greens and there are no plans or directions or instructions for any kind of internal contouring at all which is a lot of the beauty and quality of PV's greens. Paul's answer to that in the past has been he doesn't think Colt did that with his plans on courses. Well, maybe he didn't but if he was only around for one week in 1913 and never returned I'm pretty sure the greens of Pine Valley including their beautiful internal slopes and contours) were not all designed and built in that single week!
In my opinion, what Colt really did for Pine Valley is to pretty much unravel a basic routing glitch that Crump had gotten himself into before Colt arrived. That and the fact that the bunkering schemes on #9, basically #10 and #11 are very similar to Colt's hole plans that have always been in Pine Valley's archives.
That in and of itself (the unraveling of a basic routing glitch), I believe is a truly significant story and it tells a great deal to people who really don't understand the intracacies and interconnections of routing golf holes and certainly routing golf courses on intricate, interesting and complex topography like Pine Valley's.
What Colt did in that vein (unravel a basic routing glitch) some who don't undertand routing very well may think wasn't much but in the way a routing of holes can interconnect (particularly if one is looking for the kind of specific balance and variety Crump was, including his demand that green to next tee be about as tight as possible or as tight as any course extant (other than #11 to #12)), it really is a pretty significant contribution on Colt's part, in my opinion. In my opinion, essentially his recommendation on #5 (which is such a famous story with Colt at PV) got most of the rest of the routing to just fall into place like a jigsaw puzzle.
Again, that is a separate story and one that should be told. I think I've touched on it on this site in the past but it really is a complex story, not the least of which was how and why Crump got stuck with those last 4-6 holes and what he finally did to resolve it years after Colt had been there.
It is a complex creation particularly if one wants to analyze most of the details but they're all documented now and I don't think there is much or any mystery left in who did what and when.
I should also say, again, if it hadn't been for Tillinghast constant generally contemporaneous reporting over the years either as himself in various newspapers and periodicals or as "Hazard" or "Far and Sure" in AG this specific PV timeline would've been really hard to near impossible to put together. Tillie supplied some very important events and particularly their dates which in a basic sense put them either before Colt, during Colt's one visit or after Colt.