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Page 1 of 4 <br />cm\historic\templates\Bush N 1721 (Drips House) <br />10/17/01 <br />NAME Drips House REF. NO. 34 <br />ADDRESS 1721 North Bush Street <br />CITY Santa Ana ZIP 92706 ORANGE COUNTY <br />YEAR BUILT 1912 LOCAL REGISTER CATEGORY: Key <br />HISTORIC DISTRICT N/A NEIGHBORHOOD Santa Ana Triangle <br />NATIONAL REGISTER CRITERIA FOR EVALUATION C NATIONAL REGISTER STATUS CODE 5S1 <br />Location: Not for Publication Unrestricted <br />USGS 7.5” Quad Date: T R ¼ of ¼ of Sec : B.M. <br /> Prehistoric Historic Both <br />ARCHITECTURAL STYLE: Bungalow/Craftsman <br />DESCRIPTION/BACKGROUND RELATED TO PERIOD ARCHITECTURE: <br />Closely related to the English Arts and Crafts Movement, American Bungalow/Craftsman architecture was popularized by The <br />Craftsman magazine and architects such as Charles and Henry Greene of Pasadena. It drew from the wood building traditions of <br />Japan and Switzerland as well as the medieval themes favored by the Arts and Crafts philosophers. Craftsman architecture stressed <br />honesty of form, materials, and workmanship, eschewing applied decoration in favor of the straightforward expression of structure. A <br />new appreciation of nature was evident in horizontal lines that reached out to embrace the landscape and the incorporation of <br />capacious porches into building plans. Primarily a residential style, Craftsman architecture can be identified by low-pitched gable and <br />hipped roofs with exposed rafters and beams in deep overhangs; wood lap or shingle siding and an occasional use of stucco; extensive <br />use of stone or brick as a secondary material; horizontal emphasis apparent in roof lines, headers, and battered porch supports; and <br />broadly proportioned wood framed windows, often clustered in bands. Craftsman homes were built from circa 1902 until the early <br />1920s. EXHIBIT B <br />E-13