"What makes you think that Crump did not want to do it? When did he decide this? Were there plans drawn up before he changed his mind? Did he feel like Travis or others were elbowing in on his territory? Please elaborate if you can . . . "
David:
What makes me think Crump didn't want to complete the reverse routing of PVGC?
Well, barring someone like Tom MacWood's constant refrain on here with me or perhaps just PVGC that if it isn't written somewhere it couldn't have been true, then how about this....
We do know from Travis himself and from quite a bit of fanfare in his magazine, "The American Golfer" that he felt that Crump had agreed to have him work on a reverse routing for Pine Valley. You can certainly go on-line and read what Travis said about it in the magazine complete with a few hole drawings of how the reverse routing would work (if there is a complete set of reverse routing hole drawings from Travis I'm not aware of it). I don't have Travis's partial PVGC's reverse routing and article at my fingertips but I think he began to write about it and began to create a few hole drawings for it in 1914, perhaps 1915. One wonders, in that case, why it went no farther from that point. I'm not sure, but it appears to me that he may never have finished that reverse routing and the reverse hole drawings. Did Crump just tell him at that point he didn't really think it would happen? I don't know, but it doesn't seem to have been pursued beyond that relatively early period in the creation of PVGC itself.
But then we certainly do know it never happened, don't we? We do know that George Crump worked on PVGC until Jan 24, 1918 at which point he shot himself.
So, even sans some actual written documentation that Crump did not want to construct a reverse routing at PVGC given the fact that it went no further after that initial fanfare in 1914 or 1915 from Travis, what does that sound like to you? Does it sound like Crump wanted to do it or didn't want to do it?
I would seriously doubt that Crump felt that Travis or anyone else was elbowing in on his territory as it most certainly appears that Crump from the beginning of PVGC to the end of his life was more than willing to listen to the ideas of anyone at PVGC. We certainly do know that plenty have said they advised him in one way or another---certainly including Travis, Tillinghast, Macdonald, Colt, Evans, perhaps the Wilsons, Flynn, Thomas or some of his friends such as Carr, Baker or Smith and very likely his constant foreman Govan. And not a single time have I ever seen any instance that Crump refused to talk with or listen to anyone or to make a remark that he wasn't interested to hear their advice.
But the fact remains he clearly decided to do what HE WANTED to do there in the final analysis (that most certainly seems to be what everyone who knew Crump and PVGC said about him and I see no reason at all to doubt that), although he certainly may've been very silent about not wanting to do something someone may've recommended he do. The only single instance I've ever heard of Crump actually saying that he wasn't going to do something someone recommended to him was his semi-famous attrtibuted remark. "NO GOOD" when Colt recommended he move the 2nd green about 30 yards to the left and probably put he 3rd tee in the middle of where the 2nd green now is.