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Agenda Packet 11.6.25 (2)
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Agenda Packet 11.6.25 (2)
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French Park Historic District, Santa Ana, CA Orange County <br />OMi A«p>MMi. WM-ODM <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 />with vertical scoring. The frieze at the top of the porch features three <br />equal-sized molding-trimmed arches, with the entrance in the northern <br />most arch. A leaded glass transom tops the three plate glass windows on <br />the porch. Two front doors, with the southernmost being original, occupy <br />the north end of the porch. A plain black wrought iron fence surrounds the <br />front yard. <br />Harl and Josephine Kittle, owners of a local ranch, built this fine house <br />in 1909. A few years later Albert Perkins moved in to stay for thirty-six <br />years. Before his retirement he was a botanist and rose grower. He <br />belonged to the family that was part of the Jackson-Perkins Bros, nursery <br />business, based in Newark, New Jersey. He was a member of Masons and <br />the Elks. <br />1104 N. French St. Ernest Smith House Spanish Colonial Revival 1924 <br />A flat roof, bordered with an uninterupted parapet, tops the single <br />storied stucco-clad Ernest Smith house. The porch is sheltered by a red- <br />clay-tile-clad shed-style roof with a shaped parapet at each end. Three <br />matching arches, with the northernmost serving as the main entrance, <br />form an arcade across the front of the porch. Another arched opening leads <br />to the porch's south side. A red-clay-tile-clad hood shades the pair of <br />arched windows in the front facade, to the north of the porch. Paired of <br />small arches accent the top third. Four tall, narrow, matching windows <br />look out onto the front porch. An arched, recessed side porch opens off of <br />the south (driveway) side of the house. The house appears to have been <br />restuccoed. A small black wrought iron fence surrounds the front yard. <br />Ernest and Ada Smith built this house in 1921, and lived here for over <br />twenty years. He was a building contractor. <br />1107 N. French St. Rev. Russell House Craftsman Bungalow 1911 <br />A side-facing gabled roof, centered with an attractive gabled dormer, <br />tops the Russell House, constructed in 1911. Carved and decorated <br />bargeboards, finials, carved beam ends, carved rafter tails, and criss-cross <br />lattice venting accent the dormer and gables. A frieze, accented with a row <br />of decorative knobs, runs across the bottom of each side-facing gable. <br />Narrow clapboard siding covers the exterior, the square porch columns, and <br /> <br /> <br />
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