Bernard Darwin wrote Braid's biography and this is the list of his best designs found in the chapter dealing with golf architecture:
Gleneagles (w/Hutchison), Carnoustie (r.), Dalmahoy, Blairgowrie, Royal Blackheath (r.), Ramsey (r.), Queen's Park (Bournemouth), Rhyl, Scarborough North Cliff, Leamington Spa, Wildernesse, Burnham Castle, Weir Park, Arcot Hall, Truro, Belleisle, Drayton Park, Kingswood, Finchley, Dunstable, Bangor (r.), Mullingar, Waterford, Hilton Park, Torquay (r.), Stover-Newton Abbot, Eaglescliffe (r.), Dawlish, Middlesborough, Greenock (r.), Welshpool, Oswestry, Forfar (r.), Boat of Garten (r.) and Oresett.
It is interesting there is no mention of Pennard or Brora. I recall reading somewhere Braid was paid £25 for his work at Brora. Isn't that a small amount of money for a complete new design?
This is what Darwin wrote about Braid the architect.
"I should not say that he was very imaginative or subtle in the designing of a hole--and it is possible to be too subtle for ordinary human nature--but he had what the golf architect needs, a good eye for country and, as in everything that he touched, a temperate judgment and a fund of plain common sense. We hear a great deal of the contrast between the penal and strategic schools of architecture and I do not propose to become involved in any discussion on the that thorny question. I do not think that James was deliberately penal in spotting bunkers here and there to catch each and all of the bad shots. He was too good an artist for that, but at the same time he did not like to let the errant play 'get away with it', amd would now and again have a gently malign satisfaction in blocking his too wide and easy road....It was a curious fate that he should live and play for so many years of his life on two of the best inland courses, the Old and the New at Walton Heath, and yet have little or no hand in the designing of them. After Herbert Fowler's death he would no doubt be consulted as to any changes, but as long as Mr. Folwer was there, I doubt if anybody else has much to say in the matter, for he was not only a most accomplished architect, with a touch of genius, but aslo an instinctive despot."