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French Park Historic District, Santa Ana, CA Orange County <br />MF«na1Ma»«tm, con <br />United States Department of the Interior <br />National Park Service <br />National Register of Historic Places <br />Continuation Sheet <br />Section number Page <br />Lacy does not contribute to the historic district. Some wood siding is added <br />for decoration on the second floor of the front facade. Aluminum frame <br />windows are used throughout and all of the doorways face the north side. <br />820 N. Lacy St.Hamaker House Craftsman Bungalow 1913 <br />Wide eaves accent the medium-pitched side-facing gabled roof of the <br />Hamaker House. The front-facing gabled dormer and side gables are <br />accented with single exposed beam ends and Oriental-influenced venting. <br />Medium-width clapboard siding covers the exterior. The full front porch is <br />supported by stucco piers with brick-clad columns above and two sets of <br />decorative becims at cross angles. The house has a distinctive Oriental <br />feeling, exhibited by the lintels which extend beyond the ends of the <br />windows and tapered trim on the sides of the doors and windows. <br />Charles and Emma Hamaker built this single-storied Craftsman <br />Bungalow in 1913. Coming to Santa Ana in the late 1880's Charles was a <br />stairbuilder for the Griffith Lumber Company. He also built the struts <br />for Glenn Martin's first plane in 1910. Glenn went on to become tlie <br />founder of the Martin Marietta Aircraft Company. In 1990 the house was <br />moved from Civic Center Drive, approximately three-quarters of a mile <br />away, to save it from demolition because of the construction of an office <br />building. <br />825 N. Lacy St. Duggan House Colonial Revival 1906 <br />A prominent six-sided turret, located in the southwest corner of the <br />front facade, provides an important decorative element for the two- <br />storied Duggan House. Clad in narrow clapboard siding, the hhouse is <br />topped with a hipped roof. Carved brackets accent the roof line, the turret, <br />and the frieze between the first and second floors. The recessed corner <br />porch, supported by a trio of round columns resting on a solid clapboard- <br />clad pier, occupies the southwestern corner of the front facade. A plate <br />glass window, flanked by casement sidelights, and topped by three multi- <br />paned transoms occupies the space next to the first floor porch. A slanted <br />bay, centered with oval-shaped piece of stained glass, is located halfway <br />between the first and second floors, on the south side. Another slanted <br />bay, topped by a second floor square bay graces the north side. <br />  <br />    <br />