I won't speak for Patrick and I am not really even sure what these two are arguing about. These fights about what might have visible from a train entirely miss the point, and the photos from a century later are equally pointless, especially because there is now a golf course.
As for some of the comments, I've never doubted that this rolling land was interesting or that it was much different from the land around it. Those are two factors (among others) which lead me to doubt the accuracy of the AWT discovery story.
In addition to being a golfer, Crump was a sportsman, a hunter, an avid outdoorsman. Pine Valley was about 12 miles from his home. Judging from the various descriptions and maps, it may have been the closest remotely interesting and suitable land for hunting. It is impossible to believe that such land had gone unnoticed by Crump.
Yet, according to AWT's version, Crump had no idea that these rolling, wood-covered sand hills existed a dozen miles from his home. The land had gone unnoticed by Crump and he only became aware that such land existed as a result of a chance glance out the window of a fast moving train around 1910 or so. No way.