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trencn rar^ nii,toric district, Santa Ana, CA Orange County <br />M t04C0-l OMi M>. ICH-aOlt <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 />ends, exposed rafter tails, and vertical lath venting decorate the roof line. <br />Casement windows, in singles, pairs, and trios, are used throughout the <br />second floor. Wide elephantine posts, resting on solid stucco-clad rails, <br />support the corners of the full front porch. Plate glass windows, multi- <br />paned transoms and casement sidelights flank the centered front door. <br />Hentry and Anna Blanchar were the first owners of the house at <br />1009. It was built in 1922, the same year as the house to the south, at <br />1003. Both were built by Andrew Hansler. The houses share a driveway <br />and garage, as well as several design features. After Mr. Blanchar died, his <br />wife lived here until the late 1930s. <br />1011-13 N. Spurgeon St. Sutton Duplex Spanish Colonial Revival <br />1015-17 N. Spurgeon St. Sutton Duplex Spanish Colonial Revival <br />1928 <br />1928 <br />A pair of matching single-story Spanish Colonial Revival duplexes, <br />located at 1011-13 and 1015-17 N. Spurgeon, these two buildings are <br />mirror images. The buildings are topped with an ell-shaped roofs with <br />front-facing gables, accented with enclosed eaves and round vents. The <br />exterior is clad in the original stucco. Covered porches, topped by a shaped <br />parapet, are located on the north and south sides of each front-facing <br />gable. Arched openings lead into the porches. Large Palladian-style <br />windows, edged with narrow borders of glass and flanked by multi-paned <br />casement windows, is centered in the front facades. Multi-paned casement <br />windows are used throughout the rest of the each duplex. <br />Sylvester and Kate. Sutton, who built these two duplexes, lived for <br />many years in the Colonial Revival house to the north, at 1019 N. <br />Spurgeon. In 1928 they built these two duplexes and a single-family <br />house on the north side of the existing family home, at 1029 (it is now <br />gone). The first tenants were four widows: Mrs. Carrie Watson (1013), <br />Mrs. Mary L. Platt (1015), Mrs. M. C. Ford (1015), and Mrs. G. D. Pelton <br />(1017). <br />1019 N. Spurgeon St. Sutton House Colonial Revival 1900 <br />Colonial Revival in style, the single-storied Sutton House is topped <br />with a bellcast hipped roof with an offset front hip. Enclosed eaves and a <br />molding-trimmed frieze border the roof line. Narrow clapboard siding. <br />  <br />    <br />