Here's what I've got.
1887: property that is to become Bayside GC acquired by Cord-Meyer company. (Charles Meyer will be the one who develops Bayside GC.)
Source: "$3,000,000 is Paid for Queens Tract," by Maurice Foley, NY Times, 25 March 1956, pR1
27 Feb 1931: Bayside is chartered as a NY State corporation: "Bayside Golf Corp., golf courses--Street & Adikes, Jamaica: 1,000 shares common"
Source: "New Incorporations," NY Times, 28 Feb 1931, p38
18 March 1931: Construction starts.
Source: "Modern Methods Speed the Completion of Golf Course on Farmland at Bayside," by Lincoln A. Werden, NY Times, 22 Apr 1931, p32
21 Apr 1931: Mackenzie on site: "...the course will be ready during July, Dr. Alister Mackenzie, the architect, said yesterday..."
Source: "Modern Methods Speed the Completion of Golf Course on Farmland at Bayside," by Lincoln A. Werden, NY Times, 22 Apr 1931, p32
25 Apr 1931: Construction finishes (planned as of 21 Apr)
Source: "Modern Methods Speed the Completion of Golf Course on Farmland at Bayside," by Lincoln A. Werden, NY Times, 22 Apr 1931, p32
9 May 1931: Report that William H. Griffith is in charge of building Bayside, reporting to Wendell Miller and Mackenzie. Griffith came to project from Juniata Valley Colony Club where he was superintendent for three prior years. "Mr. Griffith and his family came to the Juniata Valley Colony Club from Miami Beach, Florida, where he built the golf course for Glen Curtis, the man who built the first airplane. He is now building the Bayside Course, Long Island, for Wendell Miller and Dr. Alister Mackenzie."
Source: "Golfers Miss Familiar Figure at Colony Club," Unbylined report, The Daily News, Huntingdon, PA, 9 May 1931, p2
Note: Apparently Wendell Miller was not the day-to-day site guy. In addition to finding Griffith, I have found a report of the construction of Palmetto GC in Aiken, South Carolina. In that report an RL Brown was listed as the on-site guy working for Miller. Neil Crafter found info regarding St. Charles. Together those supply a bare-bones outline of Miller's organization and how he operated.
I wonder if Juniata Valley Colony Club is a lead worth pursuing. It was built in 1924 in Mount Union, Pennsylvania, apparently near Huntingdon, and at some point was purchased by the American Legion and now is called "Mount Union American Legion Country Club." No idea who designed it -- C&W have a "Juniata" but that's not the same course.
9 Apr 1950: Charles Garrison Meyer, the developer of Bayside through his company Cord-Meyer, dies of a heart attack at his daughter's house in Oyster Bay, Long Island, aged 70. He was a founding member of National Golf Club and developed most of Forest Hills (a very big deal!).
Source: "Charles G. Meyer, Civic Leader, Dies," Unbylined report, NY Times, 10 Apr 1950, p16
24 March 1956: Announcement that Bayside GC will be sold to Jack Parker for $3-million. Parker planned to erect 600 houses on the property, at a total expected investment of $20-million. Sale expected to close by September.
Source: "$3,000,000 is Paid for Queens Tract," by Maurice Foley, NY Times, 25 March 1956, pR1
3 Nov 1956: Housing construction begins. Parker's company is named as the Nonajan Holding Corporation, of which Parker was president. The sellers were: Charles G. Meyer Jr., Mrs. Margaret M. Grand, S. Willets Meyer, and G. Howland Meyer. Presumably Mrs. Grand is Meyer's daughter (the others were his sons) -- and she divorced and remarried between Meyer's death and the sale of Bayside.
Source: "Work is Started on Bayside Homes," Unbylined report, NY Times, 4 Nov 1956, p296
25 Nov 1956: Nine holes remain open and were to remain so through "sometime late next year."
Source: "Builders Cry 'Fore' as Bulldozers Drive Golfers Off Queens Links," Unbylined report, NY Times, 25 Nov 1956, p319.
The Meyer company lives to this day but sadly neither the company nor Meyer's heirs appear to have any materials left regarding Bayside.
Mark