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Agenda Packet 11.6.25 (2)
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Agenda Packet 11.6.25 (2)
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•French Park Historic District, Santa Ana, CA Orange County <br />OMB m. (OM-aoK <br />United States Department of the Interior <br />National Paric Service <br />National Register of Historic Places <br />Continuation Sheet <br />Section number Page <br />boon to the farmers, who brought their products to town for shipping to <br />Los Angeles. The railroad also had connections to and from the East and <br />Midwest. True to Spurgeon, Fruit, and McFadden's prediction, Santa Ana <br />prospered, while Tustin, five miles to the east, languished. <br />The Western Development Company offered the the merchants who <br />had businesses along Fourth Street, Santa Ana's original commercial center, <br />a free lot if they would move to Santa Ana East. At first most were enthus <br />iastic. Soon, however, the merchants began to have misgivings. One of the <br />largest property owners in town, Jacob Ross, withdrew his support because <br />he was afraid his land on the opposite side of town would lose value. He <br />hired men to meet the arriving trains with placards that read, "This is only <br />our depot; come down and see our town." <br />The most resounding blow to the future of Santa Ana East, however, <br />was Levi Gildmacher, the owner of a general store on the west side of town. <br />He regularly extended credit to the farmers, allowing them to wait until <br />they were paid for their crops before requiring reimbursement. By <br />refusing to relocate to Santa Ana East, he kept the economic support of the <br />community in the original commercial center located along Fourth Street. <br />Most of Santa Ana East remained barren until the late 1880's, when the <br />western side of the tract began to develop as residential and the eastern <br />half, on the other side of the tracks, as industrial. <br />During the 1890s, George Wright purchased the triangle created by <br />the formation of Santa Ana East, building a small house there. Thinking that <br />the triangle would make a nice park, in the Mid-1890s the neighbors <br />purchased the property. Mr. Wright moved his house across the street to <br />the southeast corner of Vance, where the Wright Apartments now stands. <br />The neighbors dedicated the triangle, then called Flat Iron Park because of <br />its triangular shape, to the city. <br />Houses with a variety of architectural styles and representing several <br />periods of Santa Ana.history now fill tl^e neighborhood streets; however, <br />the plan for Santa Ana East, as envisioned by Fruit, Spurgeon, and McFadden <br />can still be seen in French Park's unique street pattern. <br /> <br /> <br />
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