No, the question doesn't really deserve a historical lock.
First, we have to ask whether the question should even be closed, and the answer is yes, definitely. The question is way too broad, and the only reasonable answer is "it depends on many many factors" (which all 7 answers admit). The question is not very different from "Is Java or Python faster?", say, which I expect most users would think is not a question that should stay open.
Now we can ask whether a historical lock is appropriate. These locks are for posts that are off-topic (which this one definitely is), but are nonetheless very useful. Having read through the answers, I can't really find any useful information in there. There are a couple of answers that describe in depth the results of bench-marking both compilers on specific projects, but that doesn't generalize in any way (as the answers clearly state). The results are also rather out of date (the most recent version of GCC in the answers is 5.2, which is quite old).
Now, if there existed an answer that demonstrated how to go about performing comparisons between both compilers, that would be useful. None of the answers show how to do that though, so as it stands, the answers are just anecdotal.
To address some of the arguments made in this meta question:
Yes, the question has lots of views, but for a decade old question with an extremely click-baity title like "Is GCC or Clang faster?", that's to be expected. As a daily user of both these compilers, I'm almost guaranteed to click on a title like that.
Yes, the question has lots of upvotes, but again that's to be expected for similar reasons as mentioned in the above bullet point. Also, clearly a lot of effort went into writing the top scoring answer, and an upvote is a good way to reward that. However, demonstration of effort is irrelevant on Stack Overflow when it comes to determining if a post should be open/closed/deleted; it only matters whether the post is useful.
Yes, the question has been bookmarked by a lot of users. I don't actually know the reasons for that. Personally, I would bookmark a question like that to use it with my gold tag badge as a duplicate target for questions like What are the key differences among the gcc, mingw, clang compilers? so as to save wasting 2 close votes on a "POB", or "Needs more focus" reason (which are also valid reasons). Maybe some of the bookmarks are for that, I couldn't say.
To summarize, I'm not advocating strongly for deletion; the question (while it was closed), was not causing any harm. I would have just let it be, and not shed any tears if it happened to be deleted. However, bringing it up on meta makes that pretty much a non-option. Within a couple of days, the question will either be deleted, or historically locked, and if I have to choose between those options, I'm going for deletion.
Note: In the future, if you think a question deserves a historical lock, you should flag it for moderator attention first, and if the decision doesn't go the way you want it to, then raise the issue on meta. This avoids unnecessary drama, and in particular, avoids blatantly off-topic questions from being reopened by users who may be doing so as an "anti-delete" vote. (This "anti-delete" is now particularly effective, since it turns out none of the 5 delete voters can vote to delete the question again, now that the reopening has voided their delete votes.)