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NPS Form 10-900-a OMB Control No. <br />1024-0018 <br /> <br />United States Department of the Interior Put Here <br />National Park Service <br /> <br />National Register of Historic Places <br />Continuation Sheet <br /> <br />Section 7 page 19 <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />Section 7 page 19 <br /> <br /> <br />Floral Park Historic District <br />Name of Property <br />Orange, CA <br />County and State <br /> <br />Name of multiple listing (if applicable) <br /> 48. 2315 Bonnie Brae APN: 002-122-17 Contributive 1923 <br />Architect / Builder: Unknown Original Owner: H.W. Nixon <br /> This Tudor style bungalow started its life as a bungalow but through its history there have <br />been many alterations and additions, particularly in 1941 and 1972. In 1941 there was an <br />alteration and addition to the residence, and in 1972 there was the addition of a laundry room and <br />a studio. Windows are wood frame original. All decorations are appropriate to the style. <br /> <br /> 49. 2318 Bonnie Brae APN 002-123-09 Contributive 1925 <br />Architect / Builder: J. Hancock Original Owner: Dr. Roland P. Yeagle <br /> The Yeagle House is asymmetrical in design, and this one-story stucco-clad residence <br />features the typical characteristics of English Revival style. The house is topped with a high- <br />pitched and gabled roof. On the façade ’s north half, the larger of the two wings displays a front <br />gable defined by thin rake board. A rectangular attic vents with horizontal louvers marks the <br />gable apex of each of the wings. Centered beneath the gable apex is a tripartite window with six- <br />light casement panes, slightly recessed within the plain wood surrounds. Capped with a gable <br />roof, the smallest of the three projecting wings consists of a small arched entryway with a heavy <br />door and a peekaboo window feature. Alterations include 95-square foot addition to create a <br />study at the rear of the residence, not visible from the right-of-way; the house is otherwise intact. <br />This home is on the Santa Ana Register of Historic Properties. <br /> <br /> 50. 2319 Bonnie Brae APN: 002-122-16 Non-Contributive 1923 <br />Architect / Builder: R. Frazier Original Owner: C.H. Henderson <br /> This Spanish style bungalow began its life as a simple frame and stucco residence and <br />garage, with several alterations to the home beginning in 1929 and even more in 1978. These <br />modifications include the demolition of the detached garage and the addition of an attached <br />garage with a second-floor unit. <br /> <br /> 51. 2323 Bonnie Brae APN-002-122-15 Contributive 1923 <br />Architect / Builder / Original Owner: D.E. Liggett <br /> Clad in smooth, hand-troweled stucco, this Spanish Revival styled home is topped with a flat <br />roof, half of the first-floor roof doubles as a second-floor patio. The front door is heavy wood <br />with a small peep window covered by a metal grille and complemented by sidelights. Each <br />sidelight, as well as the door opening, is marked with an inset arch on the top and three terracotta <br />pipes piercing the area directly above the front door. The front porch entry is sheathed with <br />terracotta 12” x 12” tile with three steps leading to the front landing. The roof of this gable is <br />capped with a clay barrel tile, as is the parapet of the first-floor elevation above the front door. <br />The second floor has a flat roof and is set back from the first-floor façade by approximately 10 <br />feet. As noted, this area is used as a patio. The fenestration pattern on the second floor is <br />asymmetrical with a set of French doors. There is also a shed roof topped with barrel tiles, a <br />    <br />Historic Resources Commission 268 9/23/2025 <br />