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French Park Historic District, Santa Ana, CA Orange County <br />MB. 001$ <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 />219 E. Washington St. Wells-Robinson House Craftsman Bungalow 1907 <br />The main body of the two-story Robinson House is topped with a side­ <br />facing gabled roof with a front-facing gable at the east end. A shed-style <br />dormer, accented with a pair of multi-paned windows, graces the west end of <br />the roof. Triangular knee braces, wood shingles, decorative knobs, and <br />exposed rafter tails accent the roof line. A flat-roofed single-storied porch <br />occupies the westernmost two-thirds of the house and continues west to <br />become a port cochere. French doors lead out onto the flat porch roof, which <br />is bordered with a railing with plain wood balusters between square posts. <br />The porch roof is supported by large square pillars, topped with caps. A <br />railing with plain balusters runs between the pillars. Plate glass windows, <br />topped with transoms and flanked by double-hung sidelights, dominate the <br />front facade, while double-hung windows are used throughout the rest of the <br />house. A handicap ramp, bordered by a plain wrought iron balustrade, <br />extends from the east side of the front porch. The ramp, railing, paneled <br />front door and two smaller wood posts on the front porch are not original. <br />Built by contractor W. D. Moore, this house was first owned by Mrs. <br />Miranda Wells, the widow of T. N. who was a school teacher. Phranda and <br />Ida Robinson became the owners in 1908. He came out of retirement in <br />1917, at the beginning of World War I, becoming vice president at the <br />Mission Woolen Mills, located up the street at E. Washington and Santiago <br />Blvd. The mill supplied thousands of woolen military uniforms. The <br />Robinsons continued to live in the house until the late 1930s. <br />220 E. Washington St. Cameron House Queen Anne 1895 <br />Fishscale shingles, intricate cutwork panels, finials, and molding accent <br />the gable-roofed single-storied Cameron House. An intricate cutwork vent is <br />centered in the middle of the front-facing pedimented gable. Enclosed eaves, <br />with returns, border the roof line. Narrow shiplap siding, edged in corner <br />boards, covers the exterior. The original porch, located in the northeast <br />corner of the front facade has been enclosed with matching siding. A small <br />recessed portico, supported by three square posts, takes the place of the <br />larger porch. A plate glass window, topped with a transom, is located to the <br />west of the porch. An small addition to the west side appears to have been <br />made more than fifty years ago. The original tall narrow windows on the east <br />side were replaced by smaller double-hung windows in 1946, when the <br />house was made into a diinlex. <br />  <br />    <br />