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STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE: (Discuss importance in terms of historical or architectural context as defined by theme, <br />period, geographic scope, and integrity.) <br />Santa Ana was founded by William Spurgeon in 1869 as a speculative townsite on part of the Spanish land grant known as Rancho <br />Santiago de Santa Ana. In 1877, Spurgeon, along with James McFadden and James Fruit, formed the Western Development <br />Company with the intention of bringing the Southern Pacific Railroad from its then terminus in Anaheim into Santa Ana. Thinking to <br />capitalize on commercial growth around the railroad, the partners purchased 160 acres adjacent to the eastern city boundary at French <br />Street. Although they were successful in luring the Southern Pacific to a new depot on Fruit Street in Santa Ana in 1878, the expected <br />commercial development of "Santa Ana East" never materialized. Early growth and development of the town continued to be <br />centered further west around Fourth and Main Streets, with the result that the legacy of Santa Ana East is an angled street plan whose <br />intersection with the original city is marked by a small, triangular parcel, developed in the 1890s as a small park, now known as <br />French Park. Santa Ana continued to grow, stimulated by the arrival of the Santa Fe Railroad in 1886. Following its incorporation as <br />a city in 1886, Santa Ana was recognized as one of the leading communities in the area in 1889 when it became the seat of the newly <br />created county of Orange. <br />Beginning in the 1880s and continuing well into the twentieth century, the area around the park began to be developed with many of <br />the finest homes in Santa Ana. Examples of Victorian era, turn of the century, and Craftsman homes were built along the tree-lined <br />streets. By the 1920s, most streets in the neighborhood were fully developed, although a few revival styled single-family homes and <br />duplexes were built during the 1920s, and a handful of apartments constructed in the 1930s. From the nineteenth century onwards, <br />residents were a "Who's Who" of early Santa Ana and included bankers, attorneys, doctors, businessmen, ranchers, teachers and <br />others active in the civic and social life of the city. <br />Once known as the "Nob Hill" of Santa Ana, French Park declined in the 1940s and 1950s as some homes were converted into <br />rooming houses and others were allowed to deteriorate. In the 1960s and 1970s some houses were demolished and the properties <br />redeveloped with multi-family housing. However, a grass roots preservation effort begun in the late 1970s led to the establishment of <br />a local historic district in 1984 and the listing of the neighborhood in the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. <br />One of the activities undertaken in support of the historic district has been the relocation of several historic homes slated for <br />demolition into French Park. The Chilton House is a case in point, moved from Sixth Street to Eighth Street in 1986. The property is <br />architecturally significant as a remarkably intact and highly characteristic example of the Italianate style dating to the mid 1880s <br />"boom" period. It is also noteworthy for its association with a prominent early resident, Robert Chilton, and for its contribution to the <br />historic character of the French Park district. All original and restored exterior features of the Chilton House are considered to be <br />character defining and should be preserved. These features include, but may not be limited to: materials and finishes (shiplap siding, <br />shingling); roof configuration and detailing; porch configuration and treatment; bays; windows and doors; and architectural detailing <br />such as brackets, bargeboards, frieze, columns, etc. <br />SUMMARY/CONCLUSION: <br />The Chilton House was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1999 as a contributor to the French Park Historic District <br />Under the regulations implementing the California Register of Historical Resources, the building is also listed in the California <br />Register. Included in the Santa Ana Register of Historical Property, the Chilton House has been categorized as "Landmark" because <br />it "is on the national register," "is on the state register," "has historical/cultural significance to the City of Santa Ana," for its <br />association with prominent early resident Robert Chilton, and it "has a unique architectural significance" as an intact example of <br />Italianate residential design (Municipal Code, Section 30-2.2). <br />OWNER AND ADDRESS: <br />Page 3 of 4 <br />cm\histonc\templates\Eighth E 321 (Chilton House) <br />12/20/01 <br />25F-11