For those reading this thread for the first time, it might be worthwhile to catch up with the information that has come to light in the intervening six years. No one has any better idea today who did what at White Bear Yacht Club, but we know Ross visited there in 1916, thanks a Sept. 1, 1916, article in the Minneapolis Tribune that said Ross was in the Twin Cities (to begin his redesign of Minikahda as well as supervise the completion of Woodhill) and was headed to White Bear Yacht Club "with a view of rearranging it. He probably will go to White Bear Monday or Tuesday."
Backing up a little -- and speaking to Jason's point about the unusual topography of WBYC -- there is this 1930 reminiscence from original WBYC member William Peet, regarding the initiation of the golf course by club founder Lucious Ordway: “With his usual vision, he had bought forty acres north of the railroad track to protect the rear of Dellwood and probably in the back of his mind to provide a playground of some sort for the Yacht Club. It was the God-awfulest forty you ever saw, full of hills, valleys, stumps and underbrush, with absolutely no promise of a golf links, but it served as a starter. We bought the Arkell seventy acres adjoining on the East and subsequently eighty more North of the Stillwater Road [Dellwood Road] and all of us lived at the lake went to work to raise the very substantial sum needed to make this wild and unpromising land a real golf links."
The most prominent local golf writer of the day, the Tribune's George Rhame, didn't think much of the original 9 holes: "A word about the course – it is at present made up of only nine holes, with a total of 2800 yards...It is affectionately known as a ‘goat course,’ and it is deserving of the name. The only level spots upon it, worth while, are the putting greens, and some of them are not on the level...The White Bear course has no bunkers, nor does it need any. Lucky is the man who playing it for the first time, can equal bogey 40 for the nine holes. From start to finish it is a chase after the pill, which if care is not taken, will often lead to rough grass in unexpected valleys. Anyone looking for sporty golf can find it on the links of the White Bear course. Eventually it is intended to cut down some of the ‘mountains’ and fill in the ‘fathomless’ pits. It will also within the next two or three years, be enlarged to an 18-hole course. The club is the owner of the necessary amount of land."
If Watson indeed designed the original 9 holes, as the 1925 pamphlet indicates, it was apparently in need of some improvement. Head pro Tom Vardon, who took the job in 1916, was also given credit by the club, along with Watson and Ross, for developing a first-class golf course.
Regarding the Minneapolis Golf Club, Willie Park made two visits to Minneapolis 1916 to lay out the golf course, the second on Nov. 15, according to the Minneapolis Tribune: "Mr. Park went over the club’s property near St. Louis Park in the afternoon and today he will start the work of mapping the full 18-hole links. He plans to stay here at least two weeks and will supervise the early work of construction. It is planned to rush the construction work so that the course will be ready for play by the middle of next summer. Until the new course is ready the temporary nine-hole course at Golden Valley will be used."
The course was finished by the middle of 1917, but Park did not return to oversee its completion. The club hired head pro William D. Clark from the Omaha Field Club and gave him the responsibility of finishing the course. The Bendelow confusion appears to have resulted from the fact that the Minneapolis Golf Club's original site was in Golden Valley, and the club did hire Bendelow in the late summer of 1916 to design its course there, but then most of the members voted to move the club to its current location in St. Louis Park in the fall of 1917. Park had apparently already been hired by the Hyland Homes company to design an anchor golf course for a new housing development there, and Hyland lured MGC to take over the site. Bendelow went ahead and designed the first 18-hole course for the Golden Valley Country Club, which remained at MGC's original site.
Ross was hired by MGC in 1920 to re-route its course, because the clubhouse was being moved to the opposite side of the property. On June 24, 1920, the Minneapolis Tribune reported that "J.A. Hunter, president of the club, stated that Donald Ross, golf course architect, will be in Minneapolis in September, and will make suggestions for the rearrangement of the course to harmonize with the proposed location of the new clubhouse." His re-routing plan was found in the Tufts archives a dozen years ago. It matches exactly the layout of the course today.
That's what we know now. There are still many holes to fill.