Courses that seem interesting to me but are not rated as far as I know all involve some sort of strong memory:
1. Brackenridge Park - San Antonio - Some of the stories about the place stick with me. Hogan had one of his early failures there. Tillinghast wrote about the course quite a bit. For a long time the PGA Tour 72 hole scoring record was Mike Souchek's (not sure of spelling) 257. There was a renovation within the last 10 years that looks pretty good.
2. The Ranch - San Jose, CA - from every description it might be the worst course in the US. The course tour suggests it is a brutal experience. I need to see that. Last time I tried they only had 14 holes open.
3. Stillwater Country Club, MN - this is a US club that seems to have found the magic formula of providing affordable membership and a good golf course. For a variety of reasons I have visited the club but hope to remedy that soon.
4. Tennison Park, Dallas - I have hit balls here a few times when visiting my son at SMU. The place oozes history and you can just imagine Titanic Thompson or Lee Trevino working on their next victim. The golf does not appear special. The old golf course looks terrible and the new course looks like any other modern course. Nonetheless, the hat I bought from there is terrible and I would like a better one.
5. Phoenix Country Club - I went to the Phoenix Open here in 1986 with a friend. We were both Jack Nicklaus fans and my friend wanted to follow Jack. I decided Jack's career was done and I did not really want to fight crowds so I decided instead to follow Morris Hatalsky, who I had adopted as the player I would follow primarily because his name seemed funny. There were about four of us watching Hatalsky's group, which included Gary Koch and a taller guy whose name I forget. The other members of the gallery were probably family because the players kind of looked at me funny as I followed them around.
Since that time I have stayed at a Hotel for work near the club a few times and have always wanted to go back and play it. They renovated around 10 years ago and the course now looks to be quite good.
6. Wakonda Country Club - Des Moines. This club was the height of exclusivity when I was a kid. It hosted a fundraiser for MS and allowed me to see my first professional golfers - Lee Trevino and Jan Stephenson.
The first time I played it was in a practice round for US Junior qualifying and I was paired up with Jerry Smith, who went on to play on the PGA Tour and was a couple of years older than me. He was good. It was my first hint I might not quite be ready for US Junior qualifying. During the event, Mike McCoy who recently won the US Mid-Am but then was probably about to enter college, caddied for my playing partner. Thoroughly rattled by this point, I shot 100 in the first round and might have broken 90 in the second. Mike was really nice, even as an 18 year old but I do remember his comment that "the USGA might want to check on your handicap." It stung, even though I am confident he did not intend it that way.
I played it a few more times in events and had more success but have not been back in over 30 years. I knew its design was unique at the time but would appreciate the Langford features and understand much more today.