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<br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> State of California-The Resources Agency Primary # <br /> DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION HRI # <br /> CONTINUATION SHEET Trinomial <br /> Page 3 of 4 Resource Name or# (Assigned by recorder) A. T. Bates Ranch House <br /> `Recorded by Leslie J. Neumann, SAiC *Date April 21, 2004 0 Continuation ? Update <br /> <br /> "B10. Significance (continued): <br /> In 1910, father and son John B. and Merle Ramsey, who had come to Santa Ana in 1902 and subsequently set up business <br /> as plaster contractors, purchased fifteen acres of the ranch from a Mr. Talcott. By that time, the adobe had been replaced <br /> by the present house, estimated to have been built circa 1895 (Cultural Heritage Inventory, 1983). A bam with an attached <br /> bunkhouse was located west of the house (approximately where Westwood Avenue runs today). The Ramseys began <br /> tending the orange and walnut trees already on half of the acreage, and planted additional walnut trees and apricot trees on <br /> the vacant land. They also developed the Ramsey Apple" by grafting cuttings from their home in Ohio onto California <br /> rootstock. <br /> At the time of the Ramsey's purchase, the ranch, although located within the city limits of Santa Ana, was "far out in the <br /> country, " reached via dirt roads, with no nearby neighbors. The location of the property was understood to be the vicinity of <br /> Baker and Seventeenth. In 1921, father and son divided the property, with the father keeping the rear portion for farming <br /> and son taking the front in order to take advantage of the expanding residential area of Santa Ana by building houses. City <br /> directories in the 1930s list the address of John Ramsey as 1901 North Baker Street and of Merle Ramsey as 1101 West <br /> Seventeenth Street. Westwood Avenue north of Seventeenth, however, was not developed until the post World War 11 <br /> period, and the first building permit with the current address was recorded in 1948. Merle Ramsey recalled his life on the A. <br /> T Bates ranch in This Was Mission County: Reflections in Orange of Merle and Mabel Ramsey. published in 1973, and <br /> noted that the house remained exactly when; it had been, only surrounded by streets and houses. Ramsey also recalled <br /> unearthing several Native American artifacts on the property, most notably two stone pots discovered when they installed an <br /> irrigation system. <br /> Since the second half of the twentieth century, the neighborhood in which the A. T. Bates Ranch House is located has been <br /> known as West Floral Park. Bounded by Santiago Creek on the north, West Seventeenth Street on the south, North Flower <br /> Street on the east and North Bristol Street on the west, this residential area largely developed after 1947. Prior to that time, <br /> the area was primarily agricultural, and other than Flower Street, which was improved with houses during the 1920s and <br /> 1930s, contained only a handful of residences on Baker and Bristol Streets, the City Water Works pumping plant at 2315 <br /> North Bristol Street, and the Animal Shelter and City/County Pound at 2321 North Bristol Street. Between 1947 and 1950, <br /> around two dozen homes were constructed on Baker, Olive, Towner, and Westwood Streets. Construction boomed during <br /> the 1950s, and the California Ranch style homes that characterized that era still dominate the streets of West Floral Park in <br /> the early twenty-first century. <br /> Although the A. T Bates Ranch House has been altered somewhat, its massing, roof configuration, the placement of the <br /> windows and doors, and plan features such as the porch and balcony still bear a close resemblance to historic photographs <br /> in the Ramsey book (see Continuation Sheet 4 of 4) and included in the documentation at the Santa Ana Library History <br /> Room (Cultural Resources Inventory, 1983). The house is vernacular in design, combining features associated with the <br /> Dutch Colonial Revival (the gambrel rood with the elements of the tradition of wood-framed folk houses (the overall <br /> massing, simplicity of design, and lack of ornamentation). In contrast to the mid twentieth century "California Ranch" style <br /> homes that have been built around it, the A. T Bates Ranch House is easily recognizable as a product of the nineteenth <br /> century. <br /> The A. T Bates Ranch House qualifies for listing in the Santa Ana Register of Historical Properties under Criterion 1, as a <br /> structure with the distinguishing characteristics of an architectural style or period, and under Criterion 7, as a building <br /> connected with a business or use which was once common, but is now rare. Additionally, the house has been categorized <br /> as "Key" because it "is characteristic of a significant period in the history of the City of Santa Ana, "the agricultural period. <br /> Character-defining exterior features of the A. T. Bates Ranch House that should be preserved include, but may not be <br /> limited to: original materials and finishes where extant; roof configuration and detailing, massing; windows and doors <br /> (including original placement dimensions, and materials where extant); porch configuration and original detailing, where <br /> extant,' brick chimney, and architectural details (such as the sill course and balcony). <br /> DPR 523L Page 5 of 6 <br /> 25F-11 <br />