Bryan,
Look at the bright side - next time Patrick tells you are "agenda driven" you can point to TMac's post to say you weren't, because even he admits you didn't know where you were going when you started this thread.
I am still having trouble grasping Tmac's basic point. Is he, as someone who has tried to sell his services as a golf historian, saying that you need to start out trying to prove (or often, disprove) something to make digging up old documents worthwhile? Do you need a theory to start with or is it okay to just find stuff and let the history go where it goes?
BTW, for the record, I am coming around to Patrick's way of thinking on the PV land discovery process. I doubt he got a hunting lease from Lumberton, as they wouldn't want guns around an active mine site, so if he hunted it, it would have to be before 1904. Maybe you could expand your search to see if there were any hunting licences granted?
And, it makes sense that he would tell Tillie that he had been on that land and maybe it would be good for golf, since Tillie was an architect. They discussed it, and as far as Tillie was concerned, it was the first time he thought about it for golf, or Tillie concurred, or whatever. It may have been Tillie's reality, and just as Shelly said - Crump knew the land, but it got more serious considerations when he and Tillie saw and discussed it from the train. Even then, he spent some time looking at Atlantic City, because his buddies wanted to play down there for better weather, etc. at that time. When sites were deemed less than perfect, he came back to the PV site.
Of course, that will be labeled as, and is, speculation. If you were looking for facts to solve this thing, a look into any Ireland family records might be in order to see about hunting leases. I believe someone said they were typical, even back then, so maybe they still exist somewhere.