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Agenda Packet 11.6.25 (2)
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Agenda Packet 11.6.25 (2)
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m. mt 0019 <br />United States Department of the Interior <br />National Park Service <br />National Register of Historic Places <br />Continuation Sheet <br />Section number Page <br />stairway is faced with a wood balcony with plain wood balusters. The <br />underside is decorated with carved brackets. Six 12-light windows form a <br />row along the north side of the second floor of the two-story section. The <br />original paired garage doors, located next to the sidewalk, are accented with <br />two rows of multi-paned windows. A matching stucco-clad wall begins at <br />the northwest corner of the house and surrounds the back yard. <br />Edward and Florence Moore, who built the house on the west half of <br />the lot at 312 E. 9th St. in 1923, built this large split level Spanish Colonial <br />Revival home in 1926. Born in Lawrence County, Illinois, on September 25, <br />1852, Mr. Moore came to California in 1904. He and his wife purchased <br />eighty acres of peat land in Smeltzer. They raised celery, barley, and corn. <br />In 1923 they purchased this property, electing to build and occupy the <br />smaller house on the westernmost portion of the lot until they could build <br />the larger residence. Albert and Marianne Muller bought the house in 1928. <br />He was the owner of the Muller Tool Company. By 1931 Carl C. Cowles, a <br />prominent local attorney, and his wife, Helen, moved in to stay for several <br />years. He had his office at 310 N. Main St. in Downtown Santa Ana. He <br />specialized in bankruptcy cases. A charter member and past master of the <br />Silver Chord Chapter of the Masons in Santa Ana, he was active in the civic <br />life of Santa Ana. <br />825-27 N. French St. Warner Apartment No. 2 Minimal Traditional 1946 <br />Unusual arched cornices which extend through the eaves of the low- <br />pitched eaves of the hipped roof, are the decorative focus of the two-story <br />apartment building at 825-27. Wide clapboard siding covers the second <br />floor while stucco covers the second floor. A single-story porch, supported <br />at one end by a pair of narrow posts decorated with vertical lath strips <br />and at the other by a multi-paned slanted bay window, extends across the <br />front of the building. Two-over-two windows, divided horizontally, are used <br />on the second floor. Tile clad stairs, with a solid stucco railing, grace the <br />north end of the building. The only alteration appears to be the screen door. <br />Mrs. A. K. Warner, who built this apartment building and the one next <br />door in 1946, lived in 825, while the first tenant in 827 was M. W. Cobb. <br /> <br /> <br />
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