The St. Andrews Golf Course clubhouse in 1956, north side, photo by James Salmon (Toronto Public Library collection). The two-storey stucco-on-brick house facing Old Yonge St. (it was just north of present-day The Links Rd.) was originally the home of Lt.-Col. Duncan Cameron, C.B., who had purchased 200 acres on the east side of Yonge St., about a quarter mile north of York Mills Rd., in 1835. The house he had built contained 28 rooms, seven fireplaces, and wine cellars, and was called Lindally after his family home in Scotland.
The St. Andrew’s Estate and Golf Course bought most of the old Cameron farm property in 1925-26. St. Andrew’s College was to have been moved to York Mills from Rosedale, but the authorities changed their minds and moved the college to Aurora, and St. Andrew’s golf course, designed by golf architect Stanley Thompson, was built instead. Thompson also designed the courses at Banff Springs, Jasper, Bigwin Inn, The Briars and St. George’s, among many others. The original 18 hole course was later expanded to 27 holes, and the club hosted many provincial and Canadian tournaments there. (Pioneering in North York by Patricia Hart)
There’s a photo in Hart's book of the front of the house. It’s tempting to think that it was designed by John G. Howard as the proportions and details of Lindally are much like those of Woodlawn. Lindally was built around the same time that Howard designed the St. John’s Church building, which is just a few hundred yards south of where Lindally stood.