Laserfiche WebLink
Exhibit B <br />EXECUTIVE SUMMARY <br />Wiesseman-Jonason House <br />2417 North Park Boulevard <br />Santa Ana, CA 92706 <br />NAME <br />Wesseman-Jonason House <br />REF. NO. <br />ADDRESS <br />2417 North Park Boulevard <br />CITY <br />Santa Ana <br />ZIP <br />1 92706 <br />ORANGE COUNTY <br />YEAR BUILT <br />1938 <br />LOCAL REGISTER CATEGORY: Contributive <br />HISTORIC DISTRICT <br />I N/A <br />NEIGHBORHOOD <br />Floral Park <br />CALIFORNIA REGISTER CRITERIA FOR EVALUATION <br />C/3 <br />CALIFORNIA REGISTER STATUS CODE <br />5S3 <br />Location: ❑ Not for Publication ® Unrestricted <br />❑ Prehistoric ® Historic ❑ Both <br />ARCHITECTURAL STYLE: Minimal Traditional <br />During the Great Depression through the immediate postwar years, the Minimal Traditional home rose in popularity as the <br />preferred style for middle-class housing in the United States. This basic house type fulfilled both aesthetic and social needs: <br />in terms of aesthetics, the form represented a stripped -down version of the historic -eclectic styles popular in the 1920s, in <br />particular the Tudor and English Revival styles. In social terms, the Minimal Traditional home satisfied requirements in <br />square footage and plan bythe Federal Housing Administration (FHA), which launched a campaign in this period to expand <br />home ownership. The Minimal Traditional home served as the prototype used by the FHA in its efforts to codify and <br />manufacture "a standard, low-cost, minimum house that the majority of American wage earners could afford" (Greg Hise, <br />Magnetic Los Angeles, p. 57). Minimal Traditional homes are typically rectangular in plan and one-story in height, often <br />with a front -gabled wing and prominent attached chimney. In contrast with the English and Tudor Revival styles the one- <br />story version mimics, the Minimal Traditional home is capped with a low or intermediate pitch roof with a hipped or side <br />gable. Sheathing materials include stucco, brick, or wood, often accompanied by stone veneer accents. Fenestration <br />generally consists of multi -light casement, double -hung, and picture windows with wood frames. The eaves and rakes of <br />the Minimal Traditional home are typically shallow (in a departure from the later Ranch House style, which they often <br />resemble). Although they have little applied ornament, many Minimal Traditional homes often display decorative wood <br />shutters and porch -roof supports <br />SUMMARY/CONCLUSION: <br />The Wiesseman-Jonason House is eligible forthe Santa Ana Register under Criterion 1 as a representative example of the <br />gable -and -wing variant of the Minimal Traditional style in Santa Ana. Additionally, the house has been categorized as <br />"Contributive" because it contributes to the overall character and history of Floral Park and is a representative example of <br />Minimal Traditional residential architecture in Santa Ana just priorto World War II (Santa Ana Municipal Code, Section 30- <br />2.2). <br />EXPLANATION OF CODES: -- - - <br />• California Register Criteria for Evaluation: (From California Office of Historic Preservation, Technical Assistance <br />Series# 7, "How to Nominate Resources to the California Register ofHistoricalResources," September 4, 2001.)` <br />3: It embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, region, or method of construction, or <br />represents the work of a master, or possesses high artistic values <br />• It embodies the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, region, or method of construction, or represents the <br />work of a master, or possesses high artistic values. <br />5S3: Appears to be individually eligible for local listing or designation through survey evaluation. <br />