Tom,
A few thoughts on your comments about Tilly's Reef.
You said, "this hole (a very long par 3)" and "a length of approximately two hundred and twenty five yards (or with the playing length under normal conditions) (MY PARENTHESES--eg probably about 275 yards to comp 225 yards in the era Tillie designed this hole)" and "It could be a short par 4 on the card for most and a super long par 3 on a championship card."
The reason for this design is to provide a par-three that has a number of subtleties to set this apart as more than just your average par-three. Tilly wrote, "But as a matter of fact the approach is of incalculable value to lend finesse to the play." It is because of his view that the approach into the green is the most important aspect of design, regardless of the length of the hole, that the subtleties of this design are so important.
The first one is that this is NOT as long a hole as you think. Remember, Tilly believed that holes were only as long as they played. Consider, what he wrote, "The other may need a bit of scrutiny for it represents a kick to the green from a slightly pulled shot into the throw on the extreme left of the fairway..." This shows that the hole will have downslopes TOWARD the green on that side. These will not be of the mounding type, but will actually be a natural contour of the the land so that a short-er shot may still make the green by playing off this hill. Actually, the Reef hole built at Bethpage (originally #5 on the Blue & now #12 on the Yellow) has this feature as the Reef cuts across the fairway and the far section is lower than the upper. This appears to be the general design of what he wanted the Reef to be, so that, in effect, it is playing at least slightly, or more, downhill.
So yes, by numbers it is a very long par-three, but by play it isn't necessarily so.
Steve, #5 at Berkshire Hills isn't one. There is no "diagonal spine" with bunber & rough.
Tilly did write that, "A similar hole was originated by me at Newport, and the variations to suit conditins have been constructed on other courses with gratifying results."
Now in addition to Newport, where did Tilly build "similar holes?" We know of the one at Bethpage which, by the way, is the smoking gun proof of his authorship of the courses, and we now know of a third that may also be one. The club is taking a careful exam & doing research in their files to see if they can authenticate it as such. If & when they do I'll share the news.
Are there any other ones that Tilly may have designed and that we might identify?