Mike
That is very interesting. So Tilly is claiming it took Crump two plus years, almost three, to determine the site was good? Is that your understanding, and if so, why did it take him so long because apparently he was looking elsewhere before settling.
The way I understand the formation of PV Crump and his closest friends, who were among the best golfers in Philadlelphia, were focused on accomplishing two goals. One, to create a difficult first class golf course that would elevate the level of play in Phila, and two, to create a top notch course nearby that could be played year round, or nearly year round. The majority of these men (maybe all of them) were companions who travelled to AC with Crump...WP Smith, AH Smith, Perrin, Carr, Buxton, etc. He was charged by this group to find the right site and this is what he wrote in a letter in the Fall of 1912:
"I think I have landed on something very fine. It is 14 miles below Camden, at a stop called Sumner, on the Reading RR to Atlantic City--a sandy soil, with rolling ground among the pines."
If he found the site in 1910, as Tilly suggests...almost 3 years before, and he had been exploring it for a couple of years, why did he keep it a secret from his friends for so long?
If Tilly was a close friend, confidant, and regular in this AC group why wasn't he an original founder and contributor? I don't believe he was ever a member of PV....is that your understanding?