Jim, et.al.,
Thanks for the information and the article about Walter Travis (including the Ekwanok info) is very helpful.
However, wasn't Travis an amateur at that time?
My original point, since bastardized for dramatic, condescending, and feigned bewildered effect, was simply that most of the immigrant, itinerant professionals who would be called upon to lay out golf courses usually spent a day or so staking out a site and left their plans with the club to implement. This is not conjecture but established fact.
Further, the vast majority of them did not have direct access much less provide direct employ to constructors who would implement those plans but instead left those details to the clubs themselves to work out in most cases.
Some did. It seems Alex Findlay and Tom Bendelow grew bigger operations fairly quickly, or at least had the resources of Spalding and Wanamakers to utilize in their efforts. Before Donald Ross showed that golf course construction could be a profitable, sustainable business most pros would only be expected to provide the design plans, not construction. If you look at the list of who laid out (designed) most of early courses many of them were simply teaching pros like Isaac Mackie, Willie Norton, Robert Gournley, John Reid, Jimmy Laing, Harry Turpie, James Hunter, Willie Wilson, and many, many more who did not supervise construction, nor would anyone pay them for such services.