Here is the quote from the August 6, Brooklyn Daily Eagle, the month before the Amateur, in a discussion about what Flynn was doing to the course to toughen the course:
Redan Seventh an Illustration.
The seventh hole, for instance, is a one-shot Redan type of hole. Here the play is over the ditch running in from the left to connect with a big trap under the green at the right. These two hazards meet in a ravine. From there up to the green is a sharp slope. At present the grass is of the short order, so that if a ball just clears the traps, it may run up to the green. It is the intention of Greenkeeper Flynn to let this grass become real rough, so that a ball after clearing the traps, if not properly hit, will be checked in its effort to sneak up to the green.
So it sounds like before Flynn's "real rough," the golfer could run the ball up onto the green despite the slope, but that Flynn wasn't a big fan of the aerial game at this point.
I guess Mike knows better than did Flynn as to how the course played before 1916.