Friday, December 14, 2012

Threatened: China House, Rancho Cucamonga, CA.


China House, Rancho Cucamonga, CA.  Photo found at The Press-Enterprise.

"Rural Chinatowns served as geographic sanctuaries where ethnicity, language, and cultural practices were held in common and where the amenities of traditional Chinese life where readily available," writes Richard Steven Street.  Marginalized ethnic groups at the turn of the 20th century needed a sense of community as Street recognized, "Chinese field hands encased themselves in a variety of protective institutions aimed at preserving their dignity and self-respect amid a hostile society."

Photo found at Flickr.
The unreinforced brick building is the only remaining structure of Rancho Cucamonga's Chinatown.  Buildings built of wood and scraps burned to the ground in 1919, after a man caused a cooking accident.  As a testament of perseverance, the China House remained long after the destruction of the community.

Rubbing the salt in the proverbial wound of erasing the physical places of immigrant history is the City of Rancho Cucamonga's decision to proceed with red tagging this early 1900s China House.  Set for demolition in as early as 60 days, the current owner, Cucamonga Valley Water District, does not have the interest or funds to restore or retrofit the building.  Its demolition would occur regardless of the city council's 1979 designation of China House as a landmark.

The demolition of this building would also come in the wake of greater interest in Asian history and preservation in California and throughout the United States.  This interest brings to question, what indeed are the motivations of the water district behind allowing this historic building to decay?

Update:  Kudos to the Chinese Historical Society of Southern California and the Chinese American Citizens Alliance for exploring options for saving China House, as reported by Neil Nesperos of the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin.

Update:  The plight of China House has just received national attention!

Update: Demolition delayed!

Update: The National Trust for Historic Preservation has just announced 2013's 11 Most Endangered Historic Places, and China House is one of them.  This year, the Trust's President, Stephanie Meeks, has taken to YouTube to further their cause.  For further information, see Save Chinatown House in Rancho Cucamonga.  Supporters are also on Facebook.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Learn: California Architecture Webinar


What better way to learn about California's architecture than from Architect and Author Allen Hess?  Learn about Northern and Southern California comparisons with emphasis on 20th century trends and innovations...from the comfort of your office or home.  This webinar begins at high noon on November 13, hosted by the California Preservation Foundation.  Register here!

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Saved: Locke, CA.

Star Theater, Locke, California.  Photo found on flickr by Kansas Sebastian

The Sacramento River's ebb and flow mimics the rhythmic changes in migrant labor throughout California's Central Valley history, where ethnic groups coursed from farm to farm in search of seasonal work as unpredictable as any undercurrent.  Harsh living conditions, abusive employers, a nomadic lifestyle, but mostly a story of perseverance all contributed to a life of uncertainty in a foreign landscape.  Life was (and is) challenging for migrant workers and best encapsulated by author Richard Steven Street in Beasts of the Field: A Narrative History of California Farmworkers, 1769-1913.  Yet we can moor our preservation barge in Locke, California and wander through what remains of one town that immigrants called home...even if they intended to leave sooner rather than later.

There is no better way to experience places than to visit them firsthand.  Sometimes however, we need to rely on others: Bitter Melon, Inside America's Last Rural Chinese Town by authors Jeff Gillenkirk and James Motlow offers readers a view that is both sensitive and articulate.  Originally written in 1987, the 2006 fifth edition includes an afterword by the authors that contemplates Locke's future. Today, stakeholder groups including Locke's ethnically diverse modern population, California State Parks, the National Parks Service, and local governments have all dropped anchor within the community.  Locke is indeed a place to watch as it draws upon its past to navigate its future.

Monday, October 8, 2012

Threatened: Colonel Allensworth State Historic Park, Allensworth, CA.

Tulare County Free Library.  Photo found at the Library Road Trip.

There is no denying that writing about Allensworth has its challenges, but not for reasons one might think.  Readers could argue that this State Historic Park should not be listed as threatened, given its protection under the state's umbrella. Can we however, definitively declare that our parks are really saved?  The continued budget problems in Sacramento have caused many state parks to be fiscally challenged.  Subsequently, they are suffering from deferred maintenance and understaffing, particularly parks involving historic buildings.  Until the state parks are supported by sufficient funding, their sustainability is at risk.

What perturbs this blogger most is missing Allensworth's story for the 48 years I have been a Native Californian.  During my formative years, California history was limited to grand statements of land and gold discoveries, romanticized visions of the California Mission system, and field trips to seek out a railroad's golden spike.  A similar narrative was presented on our American history, which I always associated with "over there" and to the east of California's left bank.  Places affected by Civil War in particular seemed far, far away.  

It was not until I watched California Forever, a film David Vassar and Sally Kaplan, that I discovered Colonel Allensworth and understood California's connection to American lives affected by the Civil War. His story, and the story of free people creating a self-governing place in California's Central Valley, is indeed a story that follows the American dream.  It is also a story that greatly contributes to the mosaic of California's past.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Threatened: Tankhouses, Windsor, CA.

Photos by Thomas Eddy
The sentries of Mendocino's skyline are the town's water towers, or tankhouses in preservation speak.  As if securing the town from an approaching fog bank, the redwood tankhouses also help us identify Mendocino as a one-of-a-kind place in coastal California.  They are a community's icons that have new found purposes; everything from wedding backdrops to hotel accommodations.
  
Tankhouses are indeed unique to the west coast, and in particular to California.  Our long, dry summers meant water needed to be stored for months until the winter rains replenished the soil.  Elevating the tanks helped to transport the water by gravity.  Noted geographer Leon Pitman has identified six different types of tankhouses with each style being unique to a particular region in California.  However, it is clear that Windsor farmers did not pay attention to this apparent "rule."


Slanted or straight walls, attached houses or windmills, all are visually top heavy due to the immensity of the redwood tanks. At least eight tankhouses can be found within and around Windsor.  Most exemplify others found throughout our state. New pumps, pressure tanks, and municipal water connections have made these tankhouses obsolete.  Today, many are turned into living spaces or storage barns, but too many others are either severely deteriorating or already lost. The skeletal remains of one is slated for demolition to make way for a modern hotel on Old Redwood Highway.  Another, with only one story remaining, is slated for a future parking lot near the new train depot.

As these iconic landmarks find their way onto wine labels and bookshelves, will others be embraced by the community as heritage resources spotted all over the vernacular landscape...or will they strictly become fodder for retail kitsch? We should be looking toward places like Mendocino to understand their value as repurposed and functional structures that can also define sense of place.

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Stay: Inn at Furnace Creek, Death Valley, CA.

Inn at Furnace Creek.  Photo found at Everett Potter's Travel Report.

If big city vacations are not your cup of tea, Death Valley will certainly provide a completely other world experience.  This is the perfect time to plan your winter vacation away from the wet and dark days to come.  Set below sea level, the valley floor supports unexpected wildlife.  Spring is particularly beautiful when the cacti and other wildflowers are in full bloom.  

The 1927 Inn at Furnace Creek started with a simple preservation interest of a different sort....business salvation.  According to the National Parks Service, the Pacific Coast Borax Company saw the writing on the wall for their Death Valley Railroad when the borax mines started closing.  The hotel attracted tourists as it does today; a welcomed oasis in the dry valley heat.  Despite the hotel's success, the rail line closed only three years later.  Furnace Creek supplied the water, so yes, they have a pool!

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Stay: Inn at the Presidio, San Francisco, CA.

The Inn at the Presidio.  Photo by Mike Koozmin for the San Francisco Examiner.

One of the best ways to learn about California history is to actually visit the places that continue to make history today.  The Inn at the Presidio is one such place.  Opening to the public as an inn last April, the former 1903 Pershing Hall is a first of its kind within the Presidio property.  No hotels existed within the Presidio prior to this event.  The operators of the inn are also seeking LEED certification, which would award the preservation as a "green" program.

Staying at the inn allows San Francisco visitors a truly unique city experience.  Away from the hustle and bustle of downtown, the Presidio is transforming into one of our country's national parks.  Operated by the Presidio Trust, the park represents a leading collaboration between government, private, and non-profit interests to save this significant place.  So, when you stay at the inn, know you are supporting preservation at its best!

Saturday, September 29, 2012

Green: Haas-Lilienthal House, San Francisco, CA.

Haas-Lilienthal House Museum, Photo found at BAC [A+P]

The National Trust for Historic Preservation has recognized the Haas-Lilienthal House as one of America's National Treasures; a new campaign to save historic places of national significance.  Built in 1886, the Queen Anne home "conveys the role of Jewish immigrants in the development of the American West."  It is also becoming a role model for urban house museums by developing a sustainable management plan that follows "green" initiatives, including maintenance practices, capital improvements, and seeking out increased relevance to today's visitors.  Spearheaded by architect, historian, and planner, Barbara Campagna and the museum's management, SF Heritage, the team will strive for a "net zero" or LEED Gold certification.  For California's historic buildings, this can mean the difference between struggling through long-term challenges or a thriving future.

Update:  Staff at the National Trust for Historic Preservation had some fun seeking out San Francisco's Hidden Gems, including the Haas-Lilienthal House.  Take a look at their adventure through many of San Francisco's unique neighborhoods and places, then consider following it for a different view of the City.

Friday, September 28, 2012

Saved: Angels Gate Lighthouse, San Pedro, CA.

Angels Gate Lighthouse.  Photo by Tash for her photoblog Palos Verdes Daily Photo

Kudos to the Cabrillo Beach Boosters with assistance by the Port of Los Angeles Community Advisory Committee in rehabilitating the lighthouse's appearance for years to come.  As reported in Preservation, a magazine by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the repairs and improvements to its exterior completed the $1.8 million project.  The interior still needs another $1.6 million, but it appears that the Cabrillo Beach Boosters are up for the challenge.

Over 25 lighthouses dot the California coastline from San Diego's Point Loma to Crescent City's St. George Reef.  One of the most notable to visitors requires a healthy heart to descend its many steps at Pt. Reyes National Seashore.  Some are open to overnight stays at the lighthouse's houses, like the one I stayed at a few years back at Pt. Arena.  Old salts and lighthouses make for great stories of the sea, and California's coastline has its share.  Contemporary stories include one relocated from Cape Cod. Some may be difficult, indeed impossible to reach by land, but all at some point in time guided the seafaring to safety.

Friday, September 21, 2012

Threatened: Bell House, Windsor, CA.

Bell House, Windsor, CA.  Photo by Thomas Eddy

The Bell House is a locally significant landmark representing one of the oldest families in early Windsor, California.  The Bell family's influence was widespread within the community, where several streets were originally named after them.  Built in 1878, the home is currently for sale.  It has gone through some rough times; divided into upper and lower apartments and a failed nursery business that took over the parcel, the Bell House has thus far persevered.  Fortunately, the home is listed on the Town of Windsor's Historic Register, so anyone considering the purchase will benefit from meeting with town staff.  The home is also prominently represented both virtually and aesthetically: the Town of Windsor's website depicts a rendering of the home under the town's brief history page, and a similar etching can be seen at the Town Green's timeline walk.  No better way to support local identity and sense of place!

Update:  The Bell House is currently off the market for unknown reasons.

Friday, September 7, 2012

Threatened: Stone Guard Rail, Highway 20 Corridor, Clearlake Oaks, CA.

Stone guard rail along Highway 20.  Photo by Thomas Eddy

Whether written, cast, etched, or built in, stone evokes permanence.  Headstones give us a sense of immortality, and stone buildings provide us with solid shelter.  During California's early highway building, stone guard rails provided a sense of security that belied accidents' realities.  Here, between the towns of Clearlake Oaks and Glenhaven, a big rig made news when it effortlessly broke through one of these guard rails.  Traffic cones in neon orange have replaced the missing sections of the guard rail, challenging our notions of permanence.

This section of highway was built in the early 1930s to connect our northerly coast line to the Central Valley and the Sierras, ultimately developing a unique byway crossing some of the state's diverse microclimates.   Their arches seem impossibly delicate when made of stone and mortar.  Unfortunately, they are no match for big rigs or other wayward vehicles.  The traffic cones expose only part of their damage...driving along, one can see many pilaster caps broken and missing some of the stones.

At the time of writing this post, an inquiry to CalTrans' District 1 has been sent asking the fate of the stone guard rails.  Their response will be posted.

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Saved: Japanese House at Huntington Library, San Marino, CA

Japanese House & Pagoda.  Photo found at the Huntington Library's website.

The California Preservation Foundation and the Huntington Library announced that the Japanese House and related tea garden have been renovated and are now reopened to the public.  Originally built by Japanese craftsmen in Japan c. 1904, the house was then shipped to California and reassembled for a commercial art dealer during a time when Japanese tea gardens were all the rage...including one built for the 1894 California Midwinter International Exhibition in San Francisco.  When the dealers business failed, the Japanese House was bought by Henry Huntington and reassembled again at his estate in 1911 and completed in 1912.  With the house and garden in place now for 100 years, the Huntington Library is celebrating by announcing the completion of the renovation project.

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Perspective: Siskiyou County Museum, Yreka, CA.

Siskiyou County Museum, Yreka, California.  Photo by Thomas Eddy

A gold mining town from its inception, Yreka still reflects how we envision the western frontier...providing visitors ignore the strip malls and big boxes south of downtown. Conifers protect themselves by growing only on the northern slopes of the surrounding hillsides while sage chaparral, juniper trees, and field stones scatter throughout the seemingly barren landscape.  Caught in the rain shadow of Mt. Shasta, its aridness is expressed in silvered wood of old barns and the rusted decay of farm equipment forever at rest.

Yreka is the Siskiyou County seat where I found the Siskiyou County Museum along the main drag just outside of downtown.  Inside, the museum is divided into three primary exhibits: Native Peoples and Anglo-American settlement patterns separated on the first floor, and vignettes of early interiors on the second.  Managed by the Siskiyou County Historical Society, the interpretation and displays succeeded in telling regional stories of people and place...complete with maps, photos, and artifacts in professional exhibits.  Despite this polished appearance, I left unsettled and confused by some of the interpretative materials.

Some of my discomfort was intended, as in the display showing how Americans have exploited First People's image for product branding. Greater emphasis was appropriately placed on innovations in Native design, spirituality, and social structures, to name a few, but it gave an appearance of being squarely set in the past.  To combat with this notion, visitors were reminded that "Native American cultures are alive and well today, and there is a resurgence of interest in and respect for their traditional ways," yet declined to interpret modern First People's lives balanced between traditional and American culture.

A similar but more brief exhibit on early Chinese settlement presented perseverance and ingenuity within the adverse conditions of a rural mining town, yet left visitors wondering what happened to Yreka's early Chinatown...short of a highly decorative, almost kitschy, Chinese restaurant on Miner Street.

Fair interpretation with not so subtle jabs at American capitalism, I felt the interpreters dodged a few political bullets while holding their subject in high regard.  Yet with all the innovation and genius of pre-contact people, why did the museums stakeholders usurp the narrative in the museum's interpretation of early trappers?  Here, "The Quest for Beaver" begins by stating the following:

The Mountain Man, in a very true sense, is a real American frontier hero who roamed the land still virgin and unpeopled in search of beaver?  No other country or period in history has produced such a distinctive breed of men.  America owes much to these trappers, for they opened the land to the pioneers and settlers who made it great.

The land was not "virgin and unpeopled," as clearly and previously exhibited.  Who indeed were the people who inhabited this land for over 10,000 years if not a "distinctive breed?"  We have a long ways to go in our interpretation of the people and places of California.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Remembered: Anti-Chinese Violence throughout California

San Francisco's Chinatown.  Photo by Tim Greyhaven and found at his website, No Place for Your Kind.

Cal-Tales highlights preservation stories throughout California, for the purpose of never forgetting our collective history.  As a preservation blog, Cal-Tales strives to tell the stories of California places saved, threatened, or lost...patterned after the National Trust for Historic Preservation's national listings...but also places forgotten and remembered. At the crossroads of preservation and history, we are sometimes reminded of places that represent a painful past that is not limited to European wars or Southern racial tensions. California too, has a racially charged past that is still relevant today.

The New York Times' Lens recently highlighted photographer Tim Greyhaven's online photographic essay, No Place for Your Kind, which highlights todays places where 19th century anti-Chinese violence occurred.  Chinatowns were well established throughout California where farm and industrial labor was greatly needed.  As Chinese populations grew, some Anglo groups became increasingly agitated and set fires to Chinatowns that all too often included outright murder.  The nation's legislation past laws making immigration difficult at a time economic stress or when labor forces were greatly in need.  Both the New York Times article and Greyhaven's project well capture this part of California's past that should always be remembered.  Greater detail can be found in Richard Steven Street's seminal history of California, Beasts of the Field: A Narrative History of California Farmworkers, 1769-1913.

To learn more about Asian preservation projects specific to California, check out the National Asian Pacific Islander American Historic Preservation Forum.

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Reused: Mitchell Park Wading Pool, Palo Alto, CA.

Former wading pool turned biomorphic at Mitchell Park.  Photo found at The Cultural Landscape Foundation.

Planned communities in the west often included community centers and pools.  A necessity of my childhood, I remember swimming at the Warm Springs Cabana Club in Fremont, California.  Then after a move to Palo Alto and meeting new friends, we would enjoy meeting at Rinconada.  I have vague memories of also swimming...rather wading because of its shallowness...at the Mitchell Park wading pool, designed by well-known landscape architect, Robert Royston.  The 1957 design reflects  Mid Century modern aesthetics, similar to Thomas Church's 1948 Donnell pool.

For most of my childhood, the wading pool was dark, dirty, and bone dry.  Thankfully, the pool has been transformed by Dillingham Associates as a low liability biomorphic water feature.  Translation: jets of water squirt onto a nonslip, walkable surface where kids and adults can get wet without fear of drowning.  The reuse as a modern water feature retains Royston's original design, so I can still visit it and remember the park of my youth.

Saved: Richmond Plunge, Richmond, CA.

The Richmond Plunge.  Photo found at Gogobot.

Two years ago this month, the Richmond Plunge once again opened to the public in search of the joyful pleasures of swimming.  Located within Pt. Richmond's Municipal Natatorium (a word not often used today), the site is located within Pt. Richmond's Historic District.  The public pool originally opened in 1926 to accommodate the community's growth in response to nearby rail and refinery success.  As The Berkeley Daily Planet reported, the renovation would ultimately cost $7.5 million, including grants and private gifts.  

Lost: Public Pools, San Francisco, CA.

Sutro Baths, San Francisco.  Photo found at the Cliff House Project  

Peter Hartlaub, public culture critic at the San Francisco Chronicle, just published a photographic slide show and commentary about San Francisco's historic and mostly lost public pools.  Unlike pools in planned suburban communities, urban public pools are constantly competing with redevelopment in high density places.  Older pools are also vulnerable due to outdated technologies in plumbing, but their renovation or repurposing is plausible with public support.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Saved: McCloud River Mercantile Hotel, McCloud, CA.

Photo by Rob Huebschmann

The benefit of local travel is to see places throughout California that are threatened or saved.  An earlier posting from McCloud discussed the threats facing the McCloud Hospital, but today is a happy story of a place saved.  The 1897 McCloud River Mercantile Hotel has been diligently restored by its owners and includes two cafes, candy shop, and retail spaces including the Mercantile itself.  McCloud was a company logging town, but today it has become a destination at the base of Mt. Shasta.  The McCloud River Mercantile Hotel is listed with the state office of historic preservation as a historic resource.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Threatened: Terminal Island, Port of Los Angeles, CA



Noted in an earlier post about the bridges of Yosemite Valley, the National Trust for Historic Preservation has recently posted its America's 11 Most Endangered Historic Places that included two California sites. The second, Terminal Island at the Port of Los Angeles, is threatened with continued demolition over adaptive reuse by the Port Authority.

Looking into California's past sometimes exposes events that challenge us. During WWII, Terminal Island was one such venue where its community of Japanese-Americans was relocated to the Manzanar internment camp. Their experience was well captured in Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston & James D. Houston's book, Farewell to Manzanar. Places like Terminal Island and Manzanar enable us to openly discuss difficult subjects like racism, internment, and war. Without them, we are left vulnerable to missed discussions, reflections, and the risk of repeating horrific mistakes.

Update: A Southern California Public Radio posting provided a little more information about the site, and an intriguing video clip of a WWII newscast explaining the government's version of why Japanese-Americans were relocated.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Benefits: Historic Preservation

One of the first questions I am asked when discussing historic preservation is, "What are the benefits of registering a historic building?"  It is a great question, simply because the organizations like the National Trust for Historic Preservation, the National Parks Service, and our California Preservation Foundation and the California Historic Preservation Office do not make the answer obvious.  This is unfortunate, because the answer may motivate the public to actively pursue preservation projects.  So, without further delay, here are ten fundamental benefits when formally registering your project as a historic place or district:

  1. Economic incentives based on your community's participation in the Mill's Act.  Contact your local planning office for your community's status.
  2. Your community might also include special waivers, parking benefits, and signage for your historic site.
  3. A 20% federal rehabilitation IRS tax credit by way of the National Parks Service.
  4. Historic districts with historic buildings help increase property values with great value retention and faster appreciation.
  5. If your community develops a Main Street Program, town's frequently benefit from increased tourism, revitalization projects, and more job opportunities.
  6. Your building and district become protected, which in turn helps retain resale and market values.
  7. Your preservation project contributes to the cultural and heritage fabric of your community, where others can learn from your project's past.
  8. Having a home or other building formally registered is a prestigious accomplishment that benefits the entire community.
  9. It is a "green" thing that can include adaptive reuse, sustainability practices, and even LEED certification.
  10. Your project supports a better understanding of your community's unique sense of place.
Do you already have a registered historic property here in California?  Please feel free to comment about the benefits and possible disadvantages of registry.  Thank you.

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Threatened: Bridges of Yosemite Valley, CA.

Sugar Pine Bridge Drawing.  Photo file
found at the National Trust for Historic Preservation
The National Trust for Historic Preservation has recently posted its America's 11 Most Endangered Historic Places that included two California sites.  The post highlighted three Yosemite Valley bridges that the Trust described as "Rustic Style built in 1928 and 1932."  Yosemite Valley is our nation's first national park, and likely that early designers did not anticipate the millions of annual visitors and vehicles it hosts today.  Consequently, constant wear brings into question their durability by the National Parks Service, causing to consider removal and replacement.

Sugar Pine Bridge, Yosemite Valley.  Photo file found at Architectural Record.
Stone bridges are rare in the United States and link us to an earlier time where details and durability mattered.  They easily connects us to the landscape and a feeling of assurance for safe crossings.  How will we experience Yosemite with anything different?

Update: The public has been invited to provide feedback to the National Parks Service regarding the possible removal of the 1928 Sugar Pine Bridge. The plans include additional destruction of some historic cabins including the 1911 Residence 1 that traditionally housed the Park Superintendent.  The public meeting is coming up soon!  March 21, 5-8PM at Fort Mason Center's Room C370; Marina Blvd. at Laguna Street, San Francisco.  For more information and/or comment, please contact Anthony Veerkamp, Filed Director of the San Francisco Office of the National Parks Service.  The NPS is developing a larger management plan involving the Merced River corridor.

Saturday, June 23, 2012

Lost: J. McDonald Bungalow, Healdsburg, CA.


Photo by Google Earth

This early 1900s bungalow was in need of attention until 2008, when a vintner remodeled it as a tasting room, complete with a wrap around terrace to enjoy views of the vineyard.  In this bucolic landscape of Sonoma County, the bungalow's adaptive reuse exemplified the county's agrarian character.

The Windsor Times just posted an article mentioning its new owner, UPTick, decided that its aesthetics and use as a commercial facility was insufficient for their needs, and so it was demolished with little interest in preservation.  The construction company, Harkey Construction was first to post an announcement, complete with the before shot of the remodeled bungalow.  The architect will replace the bungalow with a "Mid Century Agrarian Modern" facility.



Thursday, June 21, 2012

Threatened: Pier 29, San Francisco, California

Yesterday, a fire severely damaged Pier 29 at the bay's edge in San Francisco.  Built in 1915, the pier like so many other places in San Francisco, was designed to help California compete with other international cities and ports like New York.  Highly visited events like the Panama Pacific International Exposition of 1915 and San Diego's Panama-California Exposition of the same year all attest to early investments in California.

At the moment of writing this post, it is unclear if the pier, under the Port Authority for San Francisco, is registered as a historic site.  If anyone has information, please feel free to post a comment here.

The fire highlights how we both perceive historic places and their use for contemporary needs.  We see the pier as old and immediately tag "historic" to its label, but what exactly does historic mean?  Is it historic enough to warrant rebuilding, and if so, will the severe damage alter its status?

More and more preservationists are adopting a reuse and repurpose position so that buildings are less vulnerable to the wrecking ball.  For this pier, it means reuse as a major cruise ship port and future offices and regatta station of the America's Cup.  Authorities say that the damage will not interrupt the building schedule, but what exactly does that mean?  Will the pier receive a new facade, or will it be reconstructed?  We'll be watching!

Friday, June 15, 2012

Supported & Saved: Hembree House Now Museum, Windsor, CA.

Hembree House photos by Rob Huebschmann

Dr. Atlas Hembree and his wife Clara (Cunningham) Hembree built this retirement home in 1931.  The Hembrees had just moved back from Southern California to the Cunningham Homestead to build their dream home, clearly influenced by Spanish Eclectic styles of the time.  Interior details are simple yet surprising, where doors, moldings and other miscellaneous woodwork were crafted from cypress wood on the property.  The Windsor Historical Society further discusses how ownership changed hands, including the site's significance as the founding place for Landmark Winery; a premier wine that was once enjoyed at the White House.

Today, the house is owned by the Town of Windsor, and the property is leased as a museum to the Windsor Historical Society.  The collections include early Windsor artifacts and highlights the region's productive agrarian landscape.  The museum sign, seen above, was made from a wine barrel stave by one of the museum's primary supporters, George Greeott.  The house is also listed on the Town's  historic register.



Wednesday, June 13, 2012

In Need: Cunningham Homestead, Windsor, California


Currently owned by the Town of Windsor, the Cunningham Homestead is the site of one of Windsor's earliest settlement buildings, circa 1855.  The Windsor Historical Society is managing its restoration and has been able to fund its new, temporary metal roof until a more authentic shake can be installed.  Foundation work is next, followed by returning the front porch to its presumed original location on the facade shown above.  A sketch of the original elevation appears in the Town of Windsor's history webpage.  Funding thus far will not allow for the reuse of this structure. The Cunningham Homestead is listed in the Town of Windsor's Historic Register.



Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Threatened: Mattie Washburn House, Windsor, CA.


This 1911 home was the resident of Windsor's first woman school superintendent, Mattie Washburn.  Her name is well respected within the community where one of its schools is named after her.  It's for sale!  The real estate listing identifies the parcel zoned as CR (Commercial Residential), which places this historic building at risk for redevelopment.  Seen in the photo is a rare example of one of our regional identifiers, a period tank house (a.k.a. water tower).  Some deferred maintenance has resulted in the use of a blue tarp over the tank house, however the home itself appears to be in great condition.  This home would be a great candidate for the state's or nation's historic registry.

Update:  The real estate listing has changed to describe the home as historic instead of its previous encouragement of redevelopment.  The price came down, too!

Update:  It appears that the Mattie Washburn home has been sold and will remain a private residence.  It fate is still unclear, and we can only hope that the new owners will be sensitive to its local significance.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Threatened or Not? Buddhist Temple, Fresno, California

Buddhist Temple, Fresno, California.  Photo found on flickr by Richard Harrison

In the January/February 2012 edition of Preservation Magazine, it lists this site as threatened because the current congregation has placed the building up for sale. I see this and other Buddhist temples throughout California as integral components to our state's history. Is there anyone out there actively working on this? Does anyone have photographs of the building so I may publish them here?  For this and any other building I post here, I am interested in monitoring their status.

The National Asian Pacific Islander American Historic Preservation Forum (APIA) states that the structure exterior is "protected and not a threat." The post also discusses the congregation's move toward its sale and building a new temple elsewhere in the city.  Under the control of the congregation, this change in place offers an opportunity to further discuss place attachment and "cultural" or collective memory.

Update:  Great photo found!  Also, a video from a local news agency.

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Threatened: McCloud Hospital, McCloud, CA


I stumbled upon this rare find in the historic community of McCloud, a former company town in northern California.  This circa 1903 company hospital was until recently still operating as a hospital, but unfortunately has suffered with us through poor economic times.  It's up for sale for $135K, on a couple acres and in great need of attention.  The 1976 film Baby Blue Marine was filmed here.  It's located among elegant mountain homes, lodges, and bed & breakfasts at the base of Mt. Shasta.


The Mt Shasta News covered this property in September of 2010.