Re: Colts 1913 itinerary:
Exerpts from an Old Elm Club board of governers report, dated October 17, 1914
"In January 1913, Old Elm Club was organized and plans for commencing construction of the course as early in the spring as the weather would permit were made. Donald Ross was engaged to lay out the course, and later, H.S. Colt, the famous English golf architect, who was in this country, was secured, and Old Elm represents the best ideas and skill of the two recognized experts in this work."
"Our original purchase of land comprised 140 acres. In April 1913, after spending many days trying to adapt the 140 acres to the kind of golf course we wanted, Messrs. Colt and Ross recommended the purchase of twenty acres additional land."
"Messrs. Ross and Colt devoted two days to an effort to locate this clubhouse farther back in the grounds without interfering with the golf course, but the shape of the land is such that this could not be accomplished, and all hands agreed, after many conferences, that the knoll upon which the clubhouse is now located was the only place in which it could be consructed without detriment to the golf course."
No great revelations here but it is of some interest to note that Colt does not seem to have been called to America necessarily to do Old Elm, but rather he was brought into the process that had already begun with Ross, when it was learned that he was in America.
In either case, even with all of the days that are accounted for in this document, his work at Old Elm could have been completed before May of 1913.