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French Park Historic District, Santa Ana, CA Orange County <br />Unltftd States Department of the Interior <br />National Park Service <br />National Register of Historic Places <br />Continuation Sheet <br />Section number Page 1 0 'S’ - <br />The Claycomb House, located at 1106 N. Spurgeon St., is a large two- <br />story Colonial Revival home that was moved to this location in 1931. It is <br />now boarded up and the new owner, who has agreed to follow the Secret­ <br />ary of Interior's Standards for Rehabilitation has submitted restoration <br />plans to the neighborhood board. The Tubbs House a two-story Colonial <br />Revival house with fine detailing, was built at 1203 N. Spurgeon in 1904. <br />The Dr. Hervey House, next door at 1209, is a single-storied Colonial Revival <br />home with classical detailing. <br />A few Colonial Revival bungalows were built after 1906, including <br />the Reeves House at 1009 N. French St. (1909). The Beatty House <br />(1909) at 910 N. French is a large and finely-detailed combination of Neo­ <br />classical and Craftsman architecture. The Kittle-Perkins House at 1102 N. <br />French was built in 1909 in an elegant version of the Colonial Revival style. <br />Craftsman Bungalows: <br />While the south end of French Park contains Colonial Revival houses, <br />the north half features several good examples of the Craftsman Bungalow <br />style. There are approximately 42 Craftsman and California Bungalows <br />existing within the borders of the district. 10 of those were built after <br />1920. Some of the best examples are: <br />The Mission Revival Pease House (1912), with its dramatic tower-like <br />second story, is located at 1110 N. Spurgeon. One of two Prairie School- <br />style homes in the neighborhood is the two-story house at 1113-1113 1/2 <br />N. Spurgeon built by and lived in by George Preble. He was a contractor <br />who built many large impressive commercial buildings and churches. The <br />other, at 216 E. Washington, was built in 1909 by Robert Flook, a local <br />plumber. <br />The two-story Smith-Campau House, constructed in 1909 at 801 N. <br />French St, is a very large Craftsman Bungalow with a Tudor roof and rare <br />Egyptian-influenced columns. The single-storied Bullard House, built in <br />1910 at 833 N. French, has character-defining Oriental influences. The two- <br />story Isaacson House at 1014 N. French, was built in 1911, and features <br />strong, but detailed Oriental influences and deep eaves with carved beam <br />ends. The Hill-Hawley House (1101 N. French), a Craftsman Bungalow <br />constructed in 1912, is clad in patterned wood shingles and capped with a <br />multi-gabled roof. A pair of particularly nice Craftsman Bungalows are the <br />  <br />    <br />