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EXECUTIVE 'SUMMARY <br />HARMN;Mc1VEIL HOUSE <br />817.1Vorth Lacy Street <br />San'ta,Ana, :CA 4270 <br />NAME: <br />Harmon -McNeil House <br />'REF.NO: 158 <br />ADDRESS <br />817 North Lacy Street <br />CITY <br />Santa Ana <br />.ZIP <br />92701 <br />ORANGE.COUNTY <br />YEAR BUILT <br />1888 <br />LOCAL REGISTER CATEGORY: Landmark. <br />HISTOizJgbI5TRICT <br />I Frenchd?ark <br />NEIGHBORHOOD <br />French Park <br />NATIONAL REGISTER CRITERIA FOR EVALUATION <br />B, C <br />NATIONAL REGISTER•STATUS CODE <br />X113 <br />Location: El Not for Publication ® Unrestricted <br />O'Prehistotic ® Historic '❑ Both <br />ARCHITECTURAL STYLE:' Stick/Eastlake,,(Late Victorian), Queen Anne (Lite Victorian) <br />A style first described by architectural historian Vincent Scully in the mid twentieth century, the Stick Style refers to an evoluiion,of <br />the wooden architecture of nineteenth century architect Andrew Jackson Downing, Characterized by tall proportions, steeply pitched <br />roofs, bracketed eaves, and most characteristically, exposed framing in the form of vertical or diagonal "stickwark," the style was <br />most popular during the third quarter of the nineteenth century. The stickwork Typically overlaid the siding;adorned the gable ends, <br />or was incorporated into the structure ofporches and balconies. The rectilinear quality of the Stick Style was often combined, in,the <br />last quarter of the nineteenth century, with "Eastlake ornamentation' 'Derived,from the furniture designs of Charles Locke. Eastlake, <br />an English designer and arbiter of taste who disavowed all connection with thearchitecturebearing his name, such ornamentation <br />included turned wood columns and spindles, knobs, sawn brackets, and curvilinear perforations. To southern. California; <br />Stick/Eastlake characteristics were usually associated with the predominant Queen Anne style of the late nineteenth century OVhiffen, <br />109-126). <br />The Queen Anne (Late Victorian)(also known as the Queen Anne Revival) style dominated residential architectural design during the <br />last twenty years of the nineteenth century in the West, and was nearly as. influential on early commercial buildings. Identifying <br />features include the front -facing gable roof,- ornate decoration of wood or metal along the eave and in the gable end, avoidance of flat <br />wall surfaces through the use of applied ornamentation of wood or metal, and classical columns or pilasters: Multi -storied residential <br />and commercial examples often incorporated bay windows; sometimes topped with towers. The style borrowed heavily from late <br />Medieval' models, with theaddition of other regional interpretations. Some of the mostWell-developed examples can be found in <br />California and in the southern states (McAlester, 263-268) <br />SUNIMARY/CONCLUSION: <br />The Harmon -McNeil House,was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1985 as an individual resource and again,in'1999- <br />as a contributor to the French Park Historic District. Under the regulations implementing the California Registecof Historical <br />Resources; the building is also listed in the California Register. Included in the Santa Ana Register of Historical Property, the <br />Hirmon•MGNeil House has been categorized as "Landmark" because it "is on the national register," "is on the state register;' "has a <br />'historical/cultural significance to the City of Santa Ana,' for its contribution to the French Park district, and"has a unique <br />architectural significance" as a rare and intact example of the combination of Stick/Eastlake and Queen Anne residential design <br />(Ivlunicipal.Code, Section 30-2.2). <br />EXHIBIT C <br />25A-56 <br />