William Langford -- a Golden Era architect whose courses still stand as solid tests today -- often built long par 3s on his courses, with the intention of having them played with fairway woods and even driver, according to his writings.
Three in Wisconsin that stand out:
-- The 10th at Lawsonia Links, viewed by some as perhaps his best par 3, at 239 yds from the tips (217 from the everyday white tees), played over relatively flat terrain, with some severe bunkering and mounding that deceive the player on the tee, and an enormous, tilted green that can easily produce three putts.
-- The 5th at Spring Valley, 230 yds from the tips, which plays from an elevated tee but often into the prevailing wind, with a tee shot over the corner of a pond to large, crowned green. No bunkers (true for the entire course), but a hard par where Langford demands (moreso than on many of his par 4s and 5s here) the player hit a long shot straight and true.
-- The 4th at West Bend CC, a cousin to the 10th at Lawsonia, 217 yds from the tips (201 yds from the regular tees), played over flat terrain but a hole where bunkering and mounding put a premium on accurate play off the tee.