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State of California— The Resources Agency Primary # <br />DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION HRI # <br />CONTINUATION SHEET Trinomial <br />Df 4 Resource Name: Harold T Segerstrom House <br />by Pedro Gomez *Date October 29, 2020 0 Continuation ❑ Update <br />Following World War 11, the family branched into commercial and industrial ventures, and, with the construction of South <br />Coast Plaza Town Center, became one of the most successful land developers in the county. The Segerstrom interests also <br />built the first high rise in Santa Ana, the United California Building at the corner of Tenth and Main Streets. Harold T <br />Segerstrom Sr. died in 1978, Veronica Segerstrom died in 1982. Along with his cousin Henry T Segerstrom, Harold T <br />Segerstrom Jr. joined the family firm, C.J. Segerstrom & Sons in the late 1940's and was a managing partner. Harold T <br />Segerstrom Jr. remained in the home until 1984 when he moved to Newport Beach with his wife Jeannette Segerstrom but <br />the house remained in the family until the early 1990's, until Harold T Segerstrom Jr.'s sudden death. <br />The Harold T Segerstrom House is located in Jack Fisher Park, a neighborhood northwest of downtown Santa Ana bounded <br />by Bristol Street, Santa Clara Avenue, Memory Lane, and the Interstate 5. The neighborhood takes its name from Jacob <br />(Jack) Fisher. Born in Yakima, Washington, Fisher moved to Santa Ana with his parents and sister in the early twentieth <br />century. In April 1917, upon the United States' entry into World War I, Fisher enlisted in the US Army when he was 18 years <br />old. Assigned to Company L, Seventh California Regiment, Fisher later advanced to the level of corporal in the 58th Infantry <br />of Company D. After Fisher's death at the age of 30, in March 1929, the Chapter of Disabled American Veterans he helped <br />form took his name as the Jack Fisher Post, Chapter of Disabled American Veterans. On August 23, 1933, construction was <br />completed on a park north of Santiago Creek on North Flower Street and dedicated as the Jack Fisher Memorial Park. <br />Prior to its residential development, Fisher Park formed Lots 5B, 8 and 9 of the Potts, Borden and Sidwell Tract, subdivided in <br />1881. Current -day Interstate 5 conforms to the prominent diagonal swath cut by the Southern Pacific Railroad line, which <br />was established in Santa Ana in the late 1870s and still forms the eastern border of the Fisher Park neighborhood. With the <br />exception of the Southern Pacific Railroad line, the area remained agricultural through much of the first half of the twentieth <br />century, with walnut groves and orchards dotting the landscape. In November 1947, residential development arrived when a <br />narrow strip was cleared, graded, and subdivided into 25 lots offered as Tract No. 1160, "River Lane Tract" Mirroring the <br />curve of Santiago Creek to the south, the streets displayed a curvilinear layout, with lots ranging in size from 70 to 130 feet <br />long, 140 to 190 deep. Three years later, in August 1950, another curvilinear subdivision appeared east of Flower Street, <br />with smaller lots, averaging 60 feet by 90 feet, arranged around a curvilinear pattern with cut de sacs. An outgrowth of earlier <br />City Beautiful and Garden City models, this curvilinear layout reflected neighborhood planning preferences codified in the <br />1930s by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA), which regulated and financed the increase in home ownership through <br />its mortgage lending and insurance programs. During the post -WWII housing expansion in the United States, the FHA - <br />endorsed model for city planning, as reflected in the neighborhood of Fisher Park, "set the standards for the design of post - <br />World War 11 subdivisions." (National Register Bulletin, Historic Residential Suburbs, p. 49). <br />Construction quickly transformed the neighborhood from agricultural to residential. A 1947 aerial photograph taken a few <br />months before creation of the River Lane Tract shows the area dominated by groves of trees. By 1955, nearly all the lots of <br />both tracts had been improved with single-family residences with uniform setbacks, mostly in the Ranch House style popular <br />in the 1950s and 1960s, in a configuration and unity of design still reflected there today (2020). The homes of the Jack Fisher <br />Park neighborhood represent the overwhelming success architects and builders had in the early 1950's, when building <br />homes using "California Ranch" architectural design and features. Homes and lots located in the Fisher Park neighborhood <br />were generously scaled, with homes ranging from 1, 500 to 6, 000 square feet and lot sizes from 6,500 to 25, 000 square feet. <br />The Harold T. Segerstrom House qualifies for listing in the Santa Ana Register of Historical Properties under Criterion 4(b), <br />for its association with renowned Orange County Segerstrom family, who were agriculturalists, developers, and arts patrons, <br />and under Criterion 2 for its association with prominent Santa Ana builder Allison Honer. Additionally, the house has been <br />categorized as "Landmark" for its "historical/cultural significance to the City," stemming from its association with the <br />Segerstroms (Santa Ana Municipal Code, Section 30-2.2). Character -defining features of the Harold T Segerstrom House <br />include, but may not be limited to: asymmetrical fagade, roof configuration, including steeply pitched, hipped roof and front - <br />facing and side -gabled extensions, roof and wall dormers, materials and finishes (brick, smooth stucco, and horizontal wood <br />board siding), fenestration (metal casement windows with diamond shaped patterns), exterior brick chimney and rooftop <br />cupula with weathervane; and front entry porch. <br />*1312. References (continued): <br />Ancestry.com. California, Death Index, 1940-1997 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2000. <br />Ancestry.com. 1930 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2002. <br />Harris, Cyril M. American Architecture: An Illustrated Encyclopedia. New York, WW Norton, 1998. <br />Marsh, Diann. Santa Ana, An Illustrated History. Encinitas, Heritage Publishing, 1994. <br />McAlester, Virginia and Lee. A Field Guide to American Houses. New York. Alfred A. Knopf, 1984. <br />National Register Bulletin 16A. "How to Complete the National Register Registration Form." Washington DC: National <br />Register <br />National Register Bulletin, Historic Residential Suburbs, p. 49 <br />Newspapers. com (Santa Ana Register) <br />Branch, National Park Service, US Dept of the Interior, 1991. <br />DPR 523L 2 5 C -4Q <br />