Some of you boys must be from the desert! A few of the holes mentioned here are uphill or maybe just "raised" but a few don't fall into any category of STEEPLY uphill. Shinnecock's #11? No way! Quite a raised green but not STEEPLY uphill.
Probably the most STEEPLY uphill par 3 I've seen is one, I believe, on Hershey West (Maurice McCarthy). It's one of the courses they play the Pennsylvania Junior Boys Championship every year. I know they use the Hershey West course for the Pa Junior Boys but they may use a third course too. Mike Cirba do you know if Hershey owns three courses out there and if they do it's the third course?
Anyway, this par 3 is about 130yds and so steep even these kids looked like they felt they had to hit wedges to 8 irons high and you know how high some of these kids hit the ball anyway. I don't think you can possibly see a flag and I think you also have to traverse the hill going up to the green it's so steep.
This is an interesting hole and I don't think any architect would have used it if he didn't have to! I know enough about routing to tell that this architect found some very nice holes leading up to this one and some good holes getting away from it. The problem for whoever the architect was, the holes leading up to this one he basically worked his way into a real severe corner (on the property) both in terms of no space and severe topography.
In other words, if he was going to use the hole preceding this one (and those preceding that one) he had no option at all getting away from it but to go with this severe uphill short par 3. The only other routing option was to just walk the steep hill and have the next tee where the hole following this thing is. So he obviously just went with it. But it's so steep that it even looks like some golfers might try to "scoop up on" a lofted iron!
Interestingly, I think if Gil went straight up the hill from where #5 green is to where #5 tee is at Inniscrone it might be about the same steepness as this one! I think Gil planned to come from the left of #4 green and the green was planned on #5 somewhere to the right of where the present one is. But there was some pipe easement problem they weren't aware of and also some trees protected by some environmental concern. I'll check with him about what the problem was. I like #5 as a short downhiller but in a routing sense it's definitely about the worst "backward Indian" I've ever seen.
Whoever mentioned the two long par 3s at Manufacturers picked two good steep uphillers and one of my favorites is Philly C.C. #15! This one is real uphill for a long par 3 (probably 225yds) and is just a marvelous design in every way. It basically plays to a bit of a real uphill reverse redanish effect. Getting the ball on the green is about as hard as any par 3 I can think of and it just amazes me how many people try their socks off to do it when they should know that playing the ball into the fairway in front of the green is going to get you a better average score day in and day out without doubt!