Bogey:
A good question, and I'm in line with some others here. In general, I think those of us here on GCA might be more tolerant of quirk on classic-era courses, because we tend to like restraint in our courses, and old-fashioned quirk often results from the architect simply incorporating unconventional (by today's standards) routings or features because he didn't have the ability to negotiate them any other way (or, in NGLA's case, deliberately utilized them as an ode to features found overseas). I fully admit to this; the chocolate drops that you sometimes see on a Travis or Leeds course I view as charming, old-school quirk, yet I tend to really dislike them on modern courses (Pete Dye courses are often full of them). I am a hypocrite on these matters.
Here are some examples:
Blackhawk CC in Madison WI (Shorewood Hills, the bedroom suburb, actually), may be the quirkiest course in these parts, with three par 4s at 275 yards and under, back-to-back par 5s of the exact same length, several blind shots, and a blind, uphill, par 3 as the 18th hole. I'm incredibly tolerant of it, because it's a course with 18 holes of merit squeezed into about 100 acres on some very challenging topography. One hole -- the very narrow par 4 14th -- might be viewed as gimmicky, and you'd probably not get a strong argument from me. This is it:
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,41775.0.htmlAnother course not far from here, just over the WI-IL border, is Macktown, with some unusual features:
http://www.golfclubatlas.com/forum/index.php/topic,41510.0.htmlThe par 4 9th -- maybe along with Blackhawk's 14th the narrowest par 4 I've ever encountered -- and the par 3 17th (where the green is hidden and blind from the regular-play tees) -- might strike some as gimmicky, but I enjoyed playing them.
Lawsonia has its unconventional mid-round routing that includes consecutive par holes of: 5-3-5-3-5-3. But I'd argue pretty strongly that, while unconventional (gimmicky?), the holes make wonderful use of the land, and Langford might have routed lesser holes if he thought he "needed" a par 4 somewhere in there.