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French Park Historic District, Santa Ana, CA Orange County <br />jnited States Department of the Interior <br />National Pailt Service <br />National Register of Historic Places <br />Sontinuatioh Sheet <br />Section number Page <br />800 BLOCK NORTH GARFIELD STREET <br />803 N. Garfield St. Childs House Colonial Revival 1902 <br />Placed on the diagonal on the lot at the comer of Garfield and Civic <br />Center Drive East, the single-storied Childs House is clad in narrow <br />clapboard siding and topped with a steeply-pitched hipped roof with <br />enclosed eaves. A recessed porch, supported with turned posts, occupies <br />the north half of the front facade. A plain balustrade, probably not original, <br />runs between the posts. The original front door is located in the south face <br />of the porch. New metal-framed double-hung windows replace the original <br />wood-sashed windows. Shutters have been added to all of the windows. <br />A carpenter, Oscar M. Childs, was the builder of this small house, <br />which faces the corner of Civic Center Drive East (originally Stafford St.) <br />and Garfield. Fred and Carrie Hawkins were the next owners, and lived <br />here during the 1920s, 30s, and 40s. He was a laborer. <br />809 N. Garfield St. Vacant lot N. C. <br />The Emmanuel House, an AIDS Hospice, will be built on this lot in <br />1997-98. The design, which is compatible with the historic character of the <br />neighborhood, was recently approved by the Historic French Park <br />Association. <br />813 N. Garfield St. Stearns House Transitional Bungalow 1906 <br />Topped with a front-facing gabled roof, the Steams House is clad in <br />medium-width clapboard siding. Triangular knee braces, carved rafter <br />tails, rows of decorative knobs and a trio of vertical vents accent the roof <br />line and gables. The recessed porch, supported by a clapboard-clad column, <br />is located in the northwest half of the front facade. Two aluminum-framed <br />windows and a metal awnings are the alterations in the front facade. <br />Double-hung windows are used throughout the rest of the house. The front <br />door, located in the south face of the porch, contains two rows of three <br />small square windows at the top and vertical panels below. <br />A local harnessmaker, Dan Stearns, and his wife, Lillie, built this <br />Transitional Bungalow in 1906. He worked for the William F. Lutz Company. <br />  <br />    <br />