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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 />?Qii mi$ <br />United States Department of the Interior <br />National Par1( Service <br />National Register of Historic Places <br />Continuation Sheet <br />Section number Page <br />made if plain balusters, occupies the space next to the recessed porch. <br />Obvious alterations include the stucco and asbestos shingles. The flower <br />boxes and balustrade along the top of the bay do not appear to be original. <br />Samuel Davis, who built this house in 1905, was a district attorney for <br />the County of Orange and a partner with E. E. Keech in one of the city's most <br />prestigious law firms. His interest in history led him to become one of the <br />founders of the Orange County Historical Society, serving as secretary from <br />1919 to 1947. He also belonged to the similar societies in Missouri and <br />Philadelphia. By 1920 William and Elizabeth Hoy had purchased the house. <br />A civil engineer with offices in Santa Ana, he graduated from Cornell <br />University in 1895. In February 1913 he came to California and was <br />employed by the Orange County highway commission and the county <br />surveyor's office. After serving as City Engineer of Santa Ana from 1919 <br />to 1922, he went into private practice. Specializing in water resources and <br />irrigation, he worked for half a dozen local water companies, and was a <br />member of the American Society of Civil Engineers and the American <br />Association of Engineers. <br />1227 N. French St. Roscoe Wilson House Craftsman Bungalow 1921 <br />A side-facing gabled roof, accented with caps at the peaks, tops the <br />single-storied Wilson House. Single exposed beams and criss-cross lattice- <br />work venting accent the main roof line and that of the front-facing offset <br />gabled porch roof. New stucco covers the exterior. Paired round pillars <br />support the porch. A solid rail runs between the columns. A ribbon of five <br />tall, narrow casement windows are located to the north of the porch. The <br />south facade, facing the driveway, is shaded by a long narrow pergola <br />whose concrete floor is an extension of the wrap-around porch. Carved <br />brackets extend from the south face of the house, resting on a single beam <br />supported by square wood molding-trimmed pillars. Although the house <br />has been altered by the stucco-cladding, the other architectural features <br />are still evident. <br />Roscoe and Grace Wilson, owners of the Santa Ana Preserving Co., <br />a maker of marmalade, built this house and the one next door in 1921. <br />In the mid-1920's Mrs. Maude H. Chase, the widow of Charles, moved in. <br />She operated the Chase Studio and School of Decorative Arts, located at 109 <br />E. Sixth St. The Wilsons had moved around the corner to 305 E. Washing <br />ton. <br /> <br /> <br />
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