I was fortunate to play Rolling Road Golf Club in Baltimore, MD twice this year. It is a 1923 Willie Park, Jr design that probably slips under the radar a bit. It has a fun routing that includes back-to-back par 3s on the front nine, and back-to-back par 5s on the back nine.
There are many good holes at RR with my favorite being the dogleg-left, down-then-up par 4 16th hole (434 yards). It is the number 1 stroke hole and I'm thinking (by far?) the hardest hole on the course. Frequently I don't find really hard holes to be really good holes, but this is not the case. I love this hole! Will you?
Here is the Google Earth aerial of the hole, running from bottom to top. Yes, that is the tee down near the lower left corner where you tee off almost across the previous green (probably the best par 3 on the course, No. 15)!
A view from the tee with the 15th green nearby, a good line is a bit left of that bunker behind the green, and the dogleg and steep slope down the fairway occurs around 270 yards:
So do you just hit whatever club you can say 240 yards to stay up top and play a long 2nd shot (190 yards) across the big ravine to the green (high point to high point)?:
Or play for 5 and bunt your 2nd to the bottom of the hill (but not too far as a creek crosses at 70 yards short of the green) to leave a very uphill 100 yard shot in?
Or do you choose to hit driver off the tee and turn it a bit left and catch the slope and run all the way down to the bottom of the hill leaving that uphill wedge shot? But if you hit driver and miss it even a little bit right you slide off the fairway right into the rough leaving a downhill, sidehill lie to an uphill green of about 170-200 yards! So tempting to go for it many golfers is a fool's errand.
The green isn't all that big and has a false front (!) to make matters even more difficult, and deep bunker right. Finally, a view from behind the green:
In 1926 the Baltimore Sun featured the 16th hole in detail:
The entire photo album of Rolling Road is here:
http://www.myphillygolf.com/uploads/bausch/RollingRoad/index.htmlThe Baltimore area is pretty rich with good golf, Rolling Road being right in the mix.