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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: Grover Collins House <br />*Recorded by Andrea Dumovich Heywood *Date January 19, 2023 Continuation  Update <br />DPR 523L <br />*P3a. Description (continued): <br />Steel-frame, multi-lite casements and single or double-hung wood windows appear on both east and west side facades. <br />Fenestration along the rear façade includes two large wood-frame multi-lite fixed windows flanked by single or double-hung <br />wood windows, and an aluminum-frame sliding glass door window that is situated within a rear covered patio. An interior brick <br />chimney rises above the roofline near the building’s west façade. A detached garage is located at the northwest corner of the <br />parcel (Figure 7). The property is landscaped with a lawn, low vegetation, a brick-clad pathway located in the middle of the <br />front yard that leads to the entrance, and a long driveway that leads towards the rear, detached garage. <br /> <br />*B10. Significance (continued): <br />Santa Ana was founded by William Spurgeon in 1869 as a speculative town site on part of the Spanish land grant known as <br />Rancho Santiago de Santa Ana. The civic and commercial core of the community was centered around the intersection of <br />Main and Fourth Streets. Stimulated by the arrival of the Santa Fe Railroad and incorporation as a city in 1886, and selection <br />as the seat of the newly created County of Orange in 1889, the city grew outwards, with residential neighborhoods developing <br />to the north, south, and east of the city center. Agricultural uses predominated in the outlying areas, with cultivated fields and <br />orchards dotted with widely scattered farmhouses. <br />Since the second half of the twentieth century, the neighborhood in which the Grover Collins House is located has been known <br />as West Floral Park. Bounded by Santiago Creek on the north, West Seventeenth Street on the south, North Flower Street on <br />the east and North Bristol Street on the west, this residential area largely developed after 1947. Prior to that time, the area was <br />primarily agricultural, and other than Flower Street, which was improved with houses during the 1920s and 1930s, contained <br />only a handful of residences on Baker and Bristol Streets, the City Water Works pumping plant at 2315 North Bristol Street, <br />and the Animal Shelter and City/County Pound at 2321 North Bristol Street. Between 1947 and 1950, around two dozen homes <br />were constructed on Baker, Olive, Towner, and Westwood Streets. Construction boomed throughout the neighborhood during <br />the 1950s, with the California Ranch emerging as the favored residential style. <br /> <br />The Grover Collins House qualifies for listing in the Santa Ana Register of Historical Properties under Criterion 1 as a highly <br />intact example of a speculatively built Ranch Style house by prolific developer Roy Russell from the mid-1950s. The <br />recommended categorization is “Key” because it has a distinctive architectural style and quality reflective of the Ranch style <br />(Santa Ana Municipal Code, Section 30-2.2). Character-defining features of the Grover Collins House include, but may not be <br />limited to: horizontal massing; low-pitched complex hipped roof clad in wood shingles; broad, overhanging eaves with exposed <br />rafter tails; combination of exterior materials including stucco, brick, wood lap, and distinctive board and batten siding; front <br />porch entry characterized by a low brick wall and single wood post; X-paneled and partially glazed front door; multi-lite windows <br />with original wood shutters that have scalloped wood detailing; distinctive steel-frame, multi-lite casement window at the <br />southwest corner with architectural brackets below; steel-frame, multi-lite casement windows and wood windows consisting of <br />the single-hung veriety and multi-lite fixed windows. <br />*B12. References (continued): <br />Ancestry.com. California, Death Index, 1940-1997 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2000. <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, 1950-1990. <br />    <br />Historic Resources Commission 41 1/19/2023 <br />