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French Park Historic District, Santa Ana, CA Orange County <br />urn <br />»m. Wi« ao»» <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 />1224 N. French St.Sprague House Craftsman Bungalow 1906 <br />A prominent gabled dormer, accented with four matching double- <br />hung windows, crowns the side-facing gabled roof of the one-and-one- <br />half-story Sprague House. Shaped bargeboards, single exposed beam <br />ends, exposed rafter tails, and criss-cross lath venting accent the roof line. <br />Narrow clapboard siding covers the exterior and the square columns which <br />support the full recessed porch. A large window accents the front door. <br />A plate glass window, transom, and double-hung window arrangement <br />is located to the south and casement windows are seen on the north. The <br />foundation is made of manufactured stone, as is the low wall bordering the <br />front lawn. <br />Edgerton B. Sprague, well-known in Santa Ana banking circles, <br />built this house in 1906, one year after he came to Orange County from <br />the University of Michigan where he was studying law. He became cashier <br />of the Orange County Trust and Savings Bank in Downtown Santa Ana on <br />November 5, 1906, and remained in that position until he became assistant <br />cashier at the California National Bank in March of 1915. Two years later he <br />moved back to the Orange County Trust and Savings Bank, becoming head <br />cashier. He eventually became a vice-president, stockholder, and director <br />of the Home Mutual Building and Loan Association in Santa Ana. He is <br />identified with several civic organizations, including the Masons, Council No. <br />14, the Knights of Columbus, and the Shriners. William and Grace Finn <br />became the owners in 1922. They owned the Rock Bottom Grocery Store at <br />401 E. Fourth St., and, later, a grocery store at 209 E. 15th St. <br />1225 N. French St. Davis House Colonial Revival 1905 <br />Topped with a bellcast hipped roof, accented with carved brackets <br />and centered with matching hipped dormers, the Davis House is clad in <br />stucco on the second story and asbestos shingles on the first story. Double- <br />hung windows, accented along the bottom with small flower boxes and <br />exposed beam ends, are used throughout the second floor. A recessed <br />single-storied porch occupies the north half of the front facade. A square <br />column and pilasters, resting on an asbestos-covered rail, support the <br />porch. The paneled door features a square window in the top half. A <br />single-storied square bay, decorated along the top with a low baluster <br />  <br />    <br />