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State of California—The Resources Agency Primary # <br />DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION HRI # <br />CONTINUATION SHEET Trinomial <br />Page 3 of 4 Resource Name or # (Assigned by recorder) Schlueter House <br />*Recorded by Holly Soboleske *Date October 6, 2016 Ox Continuation El Update <br />*B10. Significance (continued): <br />The Schlueter House is located in the Park Santiago neighborhood, near the present northern city limits of Santa Ana and <br />substantially north of the original city core. The neighborhood is bounded by Santiago Creek and Park on the north, East <br />Seventeenth Street on the south, North Lincoln Avenue on the east, North Main Street on the west, and the 1-5 freeway on <br />the southwest. In large pan these boundaries reflect the transportation lines that were constructed towards the end of the <br />nineteenth century and at the beginning of the twentieth century, when the Pacific Electric interurban railroad ran up Main <br />Street, the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe tracks followed Lincoln, and the Southern Pacific Railroad right-of-way mirrored <br />the freeway route. <br />This area remained primarily agricultural well into the 1920s, As of 1905, the city directories listed around twenty households <br />on East Santa Clara, Twentieth Street, "C Street" (now North Santiago Street), North Bush Street and North Main Avenue, <br />the only streets in the area at the time. The vast majority of the residents were ranchers. By 1911, the number of <br />households had increased to about thirty, and Edgewood Road and Valencia Street had been partially laid out, but most <br />residents continued to list "rancher" or'fruit grower" as their occupation In the city directories. This pattern of land use was <br />evident on the 1912 plat map of the City, which illustrated two small, Craftsman era subdivisions along Bush north of Santa <br />Clara and on Valencia and Poinsettia south of Twentieth Street, with the remaining area divided into larger, agricultural <br />parcels held by approximately ferry landowners. <br />White the area east of Santiago Street was not subdivided until after the mid -1920s, most of the present day streets west of <br />Santiago had been laid out when the City was mapped in 1923. Ranching continued to be the most prevalent occupation in <br />the neighborhood, but Increasing numbers of professionals, small business owners, merchants, and people in service <br />professions such as painters, electricians, and carpenters made their homes in the western half of the neighborhood during <br />the 1920s and 1930s. The area also attracted several city and county officials, including the City Attorney (Z. B. West, Jr., <br />321 East Santa Clara Avenue), County Supervisor, First District (C. H. Chapman, 2315 North Santiago Street), County <br />Surveyor (E. H. Irwin, 2407 North Santiago Street), and County Auditor (William C. Jerome, 2422 Poinsettia Street). By April <br />1942, when the Sanborn Company first mapped the western half of the area, most of the lots had been improved with single- <br />family homes, many in the revival styles popular during the 1920s and 1930s. Subsequent development of the eastern half <br />of the nelghborhood and infill construction in the western half displayed the simplified ranch style that emerged following <br />World Wer A <br />The Schlueter House qualifies for listing on the Santa Ana Register of Historical Properties due to Its characteristics of the <br />Minimal Traditional architectural style. Typical features illustrated by the house include its front porch, portal window, wood <br />single hung windows, and modest size. Additionally, the house has been categorized as "Contributive"because it "contributes <br />to the overall character and history" of Santa Ana, and "is a good example of period architecture." Character -defining exterior <br />features of the Schlueter House that should be preserved include, but may not be limited to, front porch, materials and <br />finishes; roof configuration and detailing; original windows and doors where extant. <br />DPR 523E <br />25F-148 <br />