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Packet_07-07-2022
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Packet_07-07-2022
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HRCA No. 2022-13, HRC 2022-6, HPPA No. 2022-3 – Gibbs-Wasley House <br />July 7, 2022 <br />Page 2 <br />2 <br />6 <br />1 <br />6 <br />having importance to the history or architecture of the city in accordance with the criteria <br />set forth in Section 30-2 of the Santa Ana Municipal Code (SAMC). This project entails <br />applying the selection criteria established in Chapter 30 of the Santa Ana Municipal <br />Code (Places of Historical and Architectural Significance) to determine if this structure is <br />eligible for historic designation to the Santa Ana Register of Historical Properties. The <br />first criterion for selection requires that the structures be 50 or more years old. <br />The structure identified meets the minimum selection criteria for inclusion on the Santa <br />Ana Register of Historical Properties pursuant to criteria contained in Section 30-2 of <br />the Santa Ana Municipal Code, as the structure is 94 years old and is a good example <br />of period architecture. No known code violations exist on record for this property. <br />The Gibbs-Wasley House is architecturally significant as a characteristic example of the <br />Tudor Revival architectural style in Santa Ana. It was built in 1928 for $15,000. <br />According to City directories, the first owners were William Isbell Gibbs and his wife <br />Jessamyne Gibbs. They lived in the home for 16 years from 1929 to 1945. Mr. Gibbs <br />was a partner at Gibbs and Scott Auto Repair in the rear of 726 S. Main Street in <br />downtown Santa Ana. The Gibbs were enthusiastic participants in the Santa Ana social <br />scene in the 1930s and entertained in the home often. Mrs. Gibbs was involved in local <br />women’s organizations. The home was sold in 1947 to rancher Glenne E. Mathis and <br />his wife Charlotte, who lived in the home for a short time. In 1954, the home was sold to <br />Dr. William L. Wasley and his wife Ruth. William had several advanced and post- <br />graduate degrees and was a research chemist for the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In <br />1962 the home was occupied by local realtor George Frazier and his wife Vernelle <br />Frazier. <br />The Gibbs-Wasley House is a two-story single-family residential building constructed in <br />the Tudor Revival style. Asymmetrical in design, the house exhibits a steeply pitched <br />complex gable roof covered in composition shingle roofing. The exterior of the building <br />is clad a combination of brick and stucco exterior walls. Notable detailing includes <br />multiple roof pitches with 12:12 pitched roofs on dominant gables, multiple overlapping <br />gables, and varied eave heights. In addition, the home features a mixture of shed and <br />dormer gables; a double gable at west side façade; exposed, rounded and notched <br />rafter tails and bargeboards in the shallow eaves; and arched gable vents. The primary <br />front elevation is defined by a dramatic bellcast to one rake of the front gable and a <br />prominent, barrel vaulted entry vestibule and correspondingly arched, wood-paneled, <br />front door with plaster quoins in arched entry recess. The brick wainscot along the entire <br />south façade, and along a portion of the east façade are not original, nor is the brick <br />cladding of the entry porch or the front pathway. Although not original, the brick waiscot <br />is compatible with the Tudor Revival style. The home features multiple tall, attached <br />brick chimneys rising above the roofline. Multi-light casement windows clustered in <br />pairs, triples, and larger groups can be found along the first and second floor of the <br />primary (south) elevation while fenestration on the side and rear elevations consists of <br />double-hung windows with plaster sills. Substantially intact, the house is currently being <br />Historic Resources Commission 4 –2 7/7/2022
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