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French Park Historic District, Santa Ana, CA Orange County <br />etm 0019m-m <br />United States Department of the Interior <br />National Pari( Service <br />National Register of Historic Places <br />Continuation Sheet <br />Section number Page i. ^ <br />905-07 N. Lacy St. Jackson House Minimal Traditional 1946 <br />Low-pitched hipped roofs top both the single-storied front portion <br />and two-storied rear section of the Jackson House, built in 1946. Unadorned <br />enclosed eaves border both roofs. Pairs of 4-over-4 double-hung windows <br />are used throughout the house. The original coating of smooth stucco <br />covers the exterior. The original paneled doors face the south side, with <br />one approximately fifeen feet from the front and the other a few feet from <br />the rear. Canvas awnings, not original, shade the windows on the second <br />floor. The building has been divided into four units, with the stairs to the <br />second floor located on the north side. <br />Henry and Louise Jackson were the first owners of this house, built <br />in 1946. He was in real estate at 415 N. Broadway. <br />910 N. Lacy St. Lieberman House Minimal Traditional 1946 <br />Wide clapboard siding covers the single-storied Lieberman House, <br />built in 1946. The side-facing gabled roof has no overhang and a red brick <br />chimney graces the south end. A paneled door is located in the recessed <br />entry, and double-hung windows are used throughout the house. A two- <br />story garage apartment house, built in 1950, is located behind the house, <br />out of view. A chainlink fence borders the front yard. <br />Rosa Lieberman, a nurse, was the first occupant of the house at 910. <br />This house and those at 914 and 914 1/2 were all built on the site of the <br />Peter Pan Nursery, owned by Fred Dierker. Fred married Anne Lierber- <br />man in 1934, after his first wife died. Rosa may have been related to her. <br />911 N. Lacy St. Holtz House Craftsman Bungalow 1928 <br />Clad in the original sand-finish stucco, the two-story Holtz House is an <br />airplane-style Craftsman Bungalow, with the second story unit near the <br />back. The upper unit is topped with a side-facing gabled roof, while a pair <br />of offset front-facing gabled roofs cap the single-storied section. Vertical <br />venting and single exposed beam ends accent each gable face. The offset <br />recessed front porch is supported by square stucco-clad columns resting <br />on a solid rail clad in stucco and accented with bricks. The bricks do not <br />  <br />    <br />