I believe the recent deletion of such questions is part of the growing pains of Stack Overflow. They do hold historical significance, but that significance changes for the community over time. Stack Overflow is, after all, a living breathing community which changes from time to time. It's certainly not what it was, nor what it will be.
I've spent the past several minutes trying to find an online archive of Stack Overflow questions, but to no avail. I know there is one and it was recently linked from another Meta question/answer, but I just can't seem to find it right now. I'm pretty sure it's not owned and maintained by Stack Exchange, though, which brings me to my point...
I think Stack Exchange could benefit from an archiving process in this matter. Maybe add a feature to the engine whereby moderators (or the community in general) can vote to preserve a historical copy of a question, but remove it from the general use of the site?
I can see the desire to remove it from the general use of the site because, in the current evolving form of the community, it doesn't fit. There's certainly no shortage of such questions which have high votes, high views, and other markers causing them to stand out but have fallen out of the topic for the community. (Questions which now belong on Super User, Server Fault, Programmers, etc., or which are just old community-wiki survey-style questions, or something else entirely.)
A problem with these questions now is that they serve to confuse new members of the community. After all, how can the most popular and highest-voted content in the site be off-topic? Doesn't the presence of so many votes indicate community approval? That is, after all, what we tell people about votes. Let the community decide. So the problem we're running into now is one of historical changes to the community. I suppose it's a good problem to have that the site has been around long enough, seen enough content, and grown enough as a community that we now face this issue.
If these questions were asked today, they'd likely be quickly closed. They're just not on-topic... today. But they were at one point. And they contain useful information. So I definitely see a need to preserve them somewhere for the Stack Overflow community to enjoy, but simply sweep out of the way.