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I:r6nuii r^Lts. ni.SLUi.J.u uiOwi.j.uc> ^<auL<i niLA , <br />otm te§4 flOTi <br />United States Department of the Interior <br />National Park Service <br />National Register of Historic Places <br />Continuation Sheet <br />Section number Page 11 <br />with a heavy dentil-trimmed cornice, forms a frame for the recessed front <br />door. Plate glass windows, with plain transoms, are located on each side of <br />the front door. Wide steps, flanked by narrow piers, lead onto, the porch. A <br />single-storied wing is located on the north side. The original carriage house <br />is located in the back, to the west of the house. The Smith and Gleason- <br />Carden houses share a common driveway. <br />Lester Gleason, a partner in the Gleason Furniture Store, was the <br />builder of this fine house. Coming to Santa Ana in 1901 from Fullerton, <br />Nebraska, he owned several buinesses in Orange and Los Angeles Counties. <br />He also owned an orange and lemon grove where El Modena High's athletic <br />field is now located. A talented musician, he played in the Santa Ana Band <br />and sang in the Methodist Church choir. Lester Lincoln Carden was the <br />second owner. Moving to Santa Ana in 1910, he went into partnership with <br />Jabe Hill in the Hill and Carden’s clothing store. He also had interests in <br />clothing stores in Pasadena and Whittier. He was a member of the Santa <br />Ana Lodge No. 794. BPOE, a charter member of the Santa Ana Country Club, <br />the Santa Ana Lions, and a member of the Chrisian Science Church. In 1923 <br />Dr. Albert Zaiser and his wife, Grace, owned the house. He was a prominent <br />early physician and surgeon. During the 1930's John and Dora Engel, a local <br />ranching family, lived here. <br />932 N. French St. Rutan House Victorian/Colonial Revival ca. 1895/1920 <br />The nicely-detailed prominent front gable and narrow clapboard <br />siding indicates that this house was probably built in the 1890's. Vertical <br />ventwork of varying widths and diagonal molding-edged trim provide a <br />pleasing pattern in the gables that face the front and sides. Pairs of ten- <br />light casement windows are used throughout the second story. A large <br />arched plate glass window, located in the center of the front facade, was <br />probably installed in the late 1920's, at the same time as the casement • <br />windows. Enclosed porches, featuring ribbons of ten-light windows, flank <br />the large window in the center of the front facade. The Sanborn map of <br />1924 shows the original open entry porch on the north side, and an open <br />porch on the south side. Both originally stopped at the edge of the front <br />facade of the house. Brick wainscotting was installed when the porches <br />  <br />    <br />