Some other interesting Met area ones...
Fresh Meadow, NY - can't recalll the story of when and where the move occurred, or if the old site is being used for any golf or bone-carrying.
Fairview NY/CT... three moves from original Tuckahoe/Mt. Vernon site (which also spawned Siwanoy)...first to Elmsford in 1908-9, across the street from that newer Elmsford site in 1912...then more than 50 years at that second Elmwood site, until the move to Greenwich in 1968. Probably the only one that moved to a new state. There's some excllent historical aerial imagery of the 56 year Elmsford (II) site, which was when Fairview enjoyed its greatest reputation, as it was the spawning home of the famous Turnesa brothers (and offspring), one of America's leading golf families.
Century NY - in 1922, gave up what is the current Metropolis (H.Strong) course, for the current Colt/Allison finery in Purchase. The Metropolis course, though decidely altered from the original Strong work, is probably the only one of these that has extant bones of what used to be there...
St Andrews NY - Technically, this early patriarch, is on it's 5th site, the first four being in Yonkers...there was the Reid 3 hole course of the famous Washington's birthday in 1888; then, when play resumed in the Fall, they made a 6-hole course "The Shonnard course," in a butcher's field NW of where they played in February. (This Shonnard course is where a very homely, decrepit and rather anonymous plaque announces the "First Golf Club" in America legend.) Then, when Palisades Avenue was extended through the Shonnard course, they moved about 1/3rd of a mile NNE to the famed Apple Tree 6 holer on the Weston estate, which was played over the most severe slope you can imagine... They then moved NE about 1 mile to the Odell Farm course, which also was steep slope on the far side of the Saw Mill River Valley; this was where that contested US National Amateur Championship was played (the first? that CBM disputed and caused the USGA to be formed)... Then finally to the Mt Hope/Hastings site (again on the most ridcilous hill you can believe) in 1897, renovated utterly by Nicklaus in 1980. None of the first four exist.
***St Andrews Bonus "Move"*** - Saegkill/Hudson River CC - when ST. Andrews moved from the Apple Tree course to the Odell Farm course, an off-shoot club of St. Andrews' women was erected two miles due North of the Apple Tree course - as the men moved about mile NNE. This was Saegkill, which looks like it was first, a 6 -holer, then 9, unti lthe first World War (about 20 years as a ladies golf club) when it was converted to a traditional club called Hudson River CC, which lasted until 1968...an 18 hole Ross that (having both seen the historic aerials and growing up near the property) must have been stunning...people familiar with Yonkers or travelling on Westchester's famed Saw Mill Parkway will note the large water tower in North Yonkers that looms over Executive Drive... that Tower was the dead center of the property, located directly in the middle of what was the 7th fairway.