TMac,
I enjoyed your list of names of designers and thought this info might help you flesh out what to put next to Stevens Park. I researched that a bit years ago when I was doing a master plan there and wrote this:
"Siblings Walter and Annie Stevens in memory of their parents donated about 40 acres about the same time as land was donated for Tennison Park (note, I think this was 1924, as Tmac lists)
In 1927-8, the city purchased 90 acres from developer L.A. Stemmons, who was developing several subdivisions in Oak Cliff, for $140,803.00, and in 1941, the final twelve acres near Hampton Road came from the Catholic Church, bringing the park to its current total of 141 acres.
Stevens Park has hosted many fine golfers, some of whom went on to prominence on the PGA Tour, including Ralph Guldahl and Frank Beard. It also has a place in DFW public golf history in its ease of integrating the facility. After several Ft. Worth courses experience trouble with integration, a group of African American golfers simply asked to play one day in 1957, and were allowed on the course without incident."
I recall reading that there was another city course sit in floodplain land consisting of about three holes, probably designed primarily for minorities at about the same time. Obviously, public golf was a bit of a scatter shot in the very early days.
As you can see, the course that exists today couldn't have come into existence until at least 1941. The 1924 version was probably less than 18 holes, and probably just laid out by some now unknown local golfers. Maybe Bredemus helped with the initial layout when he was doing Tennison, who knows.
This is just another example of the problem of trying to attribute those old courses with one gca name. While the private clubs picked the name gca's, those public courses had in many cases even more obscure and indefinite early histories. At least, SP did. I am sure there are others.