The huge Euclid Golf Club's Tudor clubhouse extravaganza opened in 1900 and was demolished soon after the Club sold out in the 1910s to make way for further development.

The Euclid Golf Club house in the early 1900s (Source: Cleveland Heights Historical Society, Lost Cleveland Heights)

The Clubhouse at Euclid Golf Club
(roughly Cedar and Norfolk)
(Postmarked June 10, 1907)
(Source:Cleveland Heights Historical Society, Postcard collection)

In the map the authors have laid out the approximate position of the Euclid Club's original 18 holes relative to the streets that were later installed after the club disbanded.  The upper nine holes are on the land that would become the Euclid Golf Allotment.  The street names in gray were not in existence while the club was in operation.  The dotted line is the boundary of the Euclid Golf Allotment.

Thanks to William Barrow for sourcing the original links layout from an early Plain Dealer article.  Thanks to Diana Fisher for drawing the map. Source: History of Euclid Golf Allotment

More on the Euclid Golf Club in:
Seagrave, Alice D., Golf Retold: The Story of Golf In Cleveland, 1940, pages 43-55.