Laserfiche WebLink
<br />State of California - The Resources Agency Primary # <br />DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION HRI # <br /> <br />CONTINUATION SHEET Trinomial <br /> <br />Page ~ of ~ Resource Name or # (Assigned by recorder) Claycomb House <br />*Recorded by Leslie J. Heumann, SAIC *Date December 5, 2001 [8] Continuation 0 Update <br /> <br />*810. Significance (continued): <br /> <br />Santa Ana. Thinking to capitalize on commercial growth around the railroad, the parlners purchased 160 acres adjacent to <br />the eastern city boundary at French Street. Although they were successful in luring the Southern Pacific to a new depot on <br />Fruit Street in Santa Ana in 1878, the expected commercial development of "Santa Ana East" never materialized. Early <br />growth and development of the town continued to be centered furlher west around Fourlh and Main Streets, with the result <br />that the legacy of Santa Ana East is an angled street plan whose intersection with the original city is marked by a small, <br />triangular parcel, developed in the 1890s as Flatiron Park, now known as French Park. Santa Ana continued to grow, <br />stimulated by the arrival of the Santa Fe Railroad in 1886. Following its incorporation as a city in 1886, Santa Ana was <br />recognized as one of the leading communities in the area in 1889 when it became the seat of the newly created County of <br />Orange. <br /> <br />Beginning in the 1880s and continuing well into the twentieth century, the area around the park began to be developed with <br />many of the finest homes in Santa Ana. Examples of Victorian era, turn of the century, and Craftsman homes were built <br />along the tree-lined streets. By the 1920s, most streets in the neighborhood were fully developed, although a few revival <br />styled single-family homes and duplexes were built during the 1920s, and a handful of aparlments constructed in the 1930s. <br />From the nineteenth century onwards, residents were a 'Who's Who" of early Santa Ana and included bankers, attorneys, <br />doctors, businessmen, ranchers, teachers, and others active in the civic and social life of the city. <br /> <br />Once known as the "Nob Hill" of Santa Ana, French Park declined in the 1 940s and 1950s as some homes were converled <br />into rooming houses and others were allowed to deteriorate. In the 1960s and 1970s some houses were demolished and <br />the properlies redeveloped with multi-family housing. However, a grass roots preservation efforl begun in the late 1970s led <br />to the establishment of a local historic district in 1984 and the listing of the neighborhood in the National Register of Historic <br />Places in 1999. <br /> <br />The Claycomb House contributes to the French Park Historic District through its architectural style and type, which are <br />representative of the district during its period of growth and significance (established by the National Register nomination as <br />1877-1945). It is one of a handful of properties which were moved into French Park from streets that were becoming more <br />commercial in use during the historic period (several more homes were recently been moved into French Park in the last <br />decades of the twentieth century). The Claycomb House is listed in the National Register of Historic Places as a contributor <br />to the French Park Historic District, is therefore listed in the Califomia Register of Historical Resources, and is located within <br />the boundaries of the locally designated historic district. It is also included in the Santa Ana Register of Historical Property <br />and has been categorized as "Key." Rehabilitated in 1999-2000, the Claycomb House possesses substantial integrity from <br />1929, when the house was moved to the present site. It exhibits the box-like proporlions, two-story massing, wood siding, <br />and hipped roof that characterize the American Foursquare genre. All original and restored exterior features of the <br />Claycomb House are considered to be character defining and should be preserved. These features include, but may not be <br />limited to: materials and finishes (siding, shingling), roof configuration and detailing, bays, original windows and doors <br />where extant, and architectural detailing such as brackets. <br /> <br />*812. References (continued): <br /> <br />Harris, Cyril M. American Architecture: An Illustrated EncvcloDedia. New York, WW Norton, 1998. <br />Marsh, Diann. Santa Ana. An Illustrated Historv. 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 Branch, National Park Service, US Dept. of the Interior, 1991. <br />Office of Historic Preservation. "Instructions for Recording Historical Resources." Sacramento: March 1 995. <br />Whiff en, Marcus. American Architecture Since 1780. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1969. <br /> <br />DPR 523L <br /> <br />2SB~1 0 <br /> <br />