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Agenda Packet 11.6.25 (2)
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Agenda Packet 11.6.25 (2)
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Frencn rarK nistonc ulszvlcz, ^anta Ana, ua urange uounzy <br />MF«nn1MP04 i^M». >0« 00>I <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 />He was City Attorney for the City of Orange for two-and-a-half years, <br />conducting that city's first bond issue. As the City Attorney for Newport <br />Beach he conducted proceedings creating the new city. He was a member <br />of several civic organizations. Mr. Bishop was chosen to speak at the <br />courthouse dedication in 1901. <br />1109 N. French St. Van Wyk House Craftsman Bungalow 1911 <br />Topped with a side-facing gabled roof, centered with a gabled <br />dormer, the Van Wyk House is clad in narrow clapboard siding. Criss-cross <br />lath venting, carved beam ends, decorative knobs, and exposed rafter tails <br />accent the roof line. Clapboard-clad square columns support the ends of <br />the full porch. Matching clapboard piers flank the centered porch entrance. <br />The original front door, centered with a large plate glass window, is located <br />between a pair of wide double-hung windows. A slanted bay is located on <br />the south side. New used brick steps, flanked by matching piers, are recent <br />additions. The landing and door on the second floor, south side, are not <br />original. <br />John and Mary Van Wyk, local ranchers, built this house in 1911. <br />The contractor was Thomas Ash. In the 1920's G. Elmer and Anna Barrow <br />and Fred and Alma Hampton each owned the house for a few years. The <br />latter owned the Hampton Bros. Furniture store at 520 N. Main Street. <br />1112 N. French St. James Alexander House Italianate Victorian ca. 1887 <br />A single-storied Italianate Victorian home, the Alexander House is <br />fronted by a Colonial Revival porch, which was installed before 1920. A <br />pair of offset connecting hipped roofs tops the house. Wide shiplap siding <br />covers the exterior. Carved brackets decorate the enclosed eaves and plain <br />frieze. Hoods, supported by carved brackets accent the tops of the tall, <br />narrow double-hung windows. The shed-style porch roof, supported by <br />round columns resting on clapboard-clad railings, is topped with a small <br />gable, located above the entrance. The south side of the wrap-around <br />porch has been enclosed with large wood-framed multi-paned windows. A <br />new wooden picket fence borders the front yard. <br />Thomas Jefferson Alexander and his wife, Mary, came to Santa Ana <br />in 1887, building this small house that same year. Thomas was in the <br /> <br /> <br />
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