Being a member at Golspie, loving Brora, and having recently played Reay and Muir of Ord, I am more convinced than ever that Scots have a tolerance for impossible par threes that exceeds anything you'll see in the US. Especially among the best players.
Consider the list below, only because I played them all in 2023.
Fortrose and Rosemarkie, 9 and 18
Reay, 1
RDC, 2
Muir of Ord, 12 (and likely 13, even at 100 yards)
Anstruther, 5 and 6
Brora, 18
Tain, 17
Golspie, 17 (probably 2 as well)
When those courses were built, even the best players were hitting a wooden club to those greens, to ask that of the best players today, you'd have to, for instance, call the 10th at Riviera a par three...
I know that par is a relatively recent term and courses that were built before the Haskell ball wouldn't have used that designation.
On the other hand, I grew up in northern Minnesota playing nearly all my golf on nine-hole courses built after WWI, and every single one of them has a par three that required a driver or brassie at the time. Same thing in SD where I lived for 23 years.
I say bring back the concept.... time for some 275- to 325-yard par threes on Tour.