Park seemed to have a tough time completing his work in the U.S. in 1916. He was hired by the Minneapolis Golf Club in the fall of 1916 to design their new course in St. Louis Park, MN (the club had moved that fall from its original site in Golden Valley, MN). Park visited the club in mid-November 1916, according to the Minneapolis Tribune, and spent two weeks drawing up a design for the club's new course.
Construction work began the following spring, but Park didn't return. The club hired William D. Clark as its head pro, and Clark was given the responsibility of finishing the construction of Park's design. Clark had design abilities and ambitions of his own, and apparently changed some of Park's original design, lengthening some holes and shortening others.
Bolstered by the discovery of Park's plans, found in a Minneapolis engineering office, the club still considers the original layout to be a Park course, but it was significantly redesigned three years later by Donald Ross.