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State of California —The Resources Agency Primary # <br />DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION HRI # <br />CONTINUATION SHEET Trinomial <br />of 3 Resource Name: Raddant House <br />by Pedro Gomez *Date May 13, 2021 ❑x Continuation ❑ Update <br />*810. Significance (continued): <br />The Raddant House is located in Floral Park, a neighborhood northwest of downtown Santa Ana bounded by West Seventeenth <br />Street, North Flower Street, Riverside Drive, and Broadway. Groves of orange, avocado, and walnut trees and widely scattered <br />ranch houses characterized this area before 1920. Developer and builder Allison Honer (1897-1981), credited as the subdivider <br />and builder of a major portion of northwest Santa Ana, arrived in Santa Ana from Beaver Falls, New York in 1922 (Talbert, <br />pages 353-356). `Before nightfall on the day of his arrival, Mr. Honer purchased a parcel of land. And that month, he began <br />building custom homes in Santa Ana" (Orange County Register September 15, 1981). The parcel chosen became the Floral <br />Park subdivision between Seventeenth Street and Santiago Creek. "When built in the 1920s, the Floral Park homes were the <br />most lavish and expensive in the area. They sold for about $45,000 each" (Orange County Register September 15, 1981). <br />Revival architecture in a wide variety of romantic styles was celebrated in the 1920s and 1930s and Floral Park showcased <br />examples of the English Tudor, French Norman, Spanish Colonial, and Colonial Revival. The Allison Honer Construction <br />Company went on to complete such notable projects as the 1935 Art Deco styled Old Santa Ana City Hall, the El Toro Marine <br />Base during World War It, and the 1960 Honer Shopping Plaza. Honer lived in the neighborhood he had helped to create, at <br />615 West Santa Clara Avenue. <br />In the late 1920s and 1930s, another builder, Roy Roscoe Russell (1881-1965), continued developing the groves of Floral Park. <br />An early Russell project was his 1928 subdivision of Victoria Drive between West Nineteenth Street and West Santa Clara <br />Avenue. The homes were quite grand and displayed various revival styles, including Russell's own large, Colonial Revival <br />mansion at 2009 Victoria Drive. In the early post World War 11 years, Floral Park continued its development as numerous, <br />smaller, single-family houses were built. Continuing in the Floral Park tradition, they were mostly revival in style. In the 1950s, <br />low, horizontal Ranch Style houses completed the growth of Floral Park. Today (2021) Floral Park maintains its identity as the <br />premier neighborhood of Santa Ana, historically home to many affluent and prominent citizens. <br />The Raddant House qualifies for listing in the Santa Ana Register of Historical Properties under Criterion 1 as a nicely detailed <br />example of the late Colonial Revival style in Santa Ana. Its horizontality, apparent on the fagade, presaged the post-war <br />emergence of the Ranch Style and its use of a Colonial Revival main entry surround anticipated a popular variation of the <br />Ranch style. Additionally, the house has been categorized as "Contributive" because it contributes to the overall character and <br />is representative example of late Colonial Revival architecture (Santa Ana Municipal Code, Section 30-2.2). Character -defining <br />features of the late Colonial Revival exhibited by this property include its symmetrically composed fagade; sheathing of wide <br />clapboards trimmed by grooved endboards and a frieze board; recessed entry with paneled reveals, paneled door, and half - <br />height sidelights; and fagade fenestration of eight -over -eight double -hung sash windows framed by shutters. <br />*1312. References (continued): <br />Ancestry.com. California, Death Index, 1940-1997 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry. com Operations Inc, 2000. <br />Ancestry.com. 1930 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry. com Operations Inc, 2002. <br />Harris, Cyril M. American Architecture: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, New York, WW Norton, 1998. <br />Marsh, Diann. Santa Ana, An Illustrated History. Encinitas, Heritage Publishing, 1994. <br />McAlester, Virginia and Lee. A Field Guide to American Houses. New York., Alfred A. Knopf, 1984. <br />National Register Bulletin 16A. `How to Complete the National Register Registration Form." Washington DC: National Register <br />Newspapers.com (Santa Ana Register) <br />Branch, National Park Service, US Dept. of the Interior, 1991. <br />Office of Historic Preservation. "Instructions for Recording Historical Resources. " Sacramento: March 1995. <br />Whiffen, Marcus. American Architecture Since 1780. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1969. <br />Santa Ana and Orange County Directories, 1920-1979. <br />Year., 1930; Census Place: Santa Ana, Orange, California; Page: 6B; Enumeration District: 0080; FHL microfilm: 2339917 <br />DPR 523L <br />