Family Album – Issue 67

Santa Cruz, Calif., Dean Silvers and Ira Schwartz
Starting with a simple 1904 bungalow that had seen its features get lost and confused over the years, we decided that our goal was to clarify our home’s style.We have put in wood floors and added a mix of original and reproduction Arts and Crafts furnishings, along with a collection of international folk art. We also “furnished” many “rooms” in our garden that surrounds our home, with ponds & fountains interspersed between over 1,000 species of plants crowded into our 50 by 100 lot. Our place, which we’ve named “The Trellises,” is an oasis in the midst of busy downtown.
Indianapolis, lnd., Wifliani Guide
This wonderful American Foursquare sits in the historic neighborhood of Irvington, which is on the National Register of Historic Places and is home to hundreds of similar Queen Anne and Arts and Crafts—era structures. Constructed in 1906 as a private residence, the home also served as a fraternity house for Butler University in the 1920s.The exterior is clad in fieldstone and shake. A matching fieldstone fireplace and beautiful wood-beamed ceilings and woodwork make this an incredible home in which to dwell.
Cincinnati, Ohio, Marilyn Bossmann and John McEvoy
Our bungalow was built by the famous Detroit architect Leonard Willeke. We have all of the home’s blueprints in addition to many of Mr. Willeke’s original pencil drawings and letters. The correspondence he maintained with craftsmen and the original owners proves very revealing.
Ferndale, Mich., Keith Binkowski and Kelly Collins
Our home is a 1922 Craftsman bungalow that we and our two children have lived in for two years. Located in an historic section just north of Detroit, the house had fallen on hard times.  Slowly though, we have made improvements. Oak hardwood floors abound upstairs and down and most of the original trim was thankfully left untarnished. The living room’s brick fireplace is flanked by built-in oak bookcases and works just fine on cold winter nights.
Pasadena, Calif., Rupert Ouano
What started out in 2002 as a quest for the most affordable Craftsman bungalow in Pasadena ended up as a painstaking but revealing remodel. The remodeling turned out to be the education of a budding historian as he searched for clues to the beginnings of the house and its courtyard complex and the inspiration for its design and structure.
Jacksonville, Fla., Jeff and JoLee Gardner
Our 1916 bungalow is in the Springfield neighborhood, the largest residential National Register district in Florida. It was constructed by a local builder for a French-Canadian immigrant couple who lived here for 33 years. Before we bought it in 2006, it—like the neighborhood. which Southern Living magazine rated as the Number 1 Best Historic Comeback Neighborhood in the South in 2010—had gone through many downturns and upswings. But it has retained its original interior and exterior details.
Brevard, N.C., J.Williamson
We bought our 1935 Arts and Crafts home in 2006 and have since restored it. It has four bedrooms and two baths, a living room with a fireplace, a dining room, and a kitchen and a small den. The house has typical Arts and Crafts molding and hardwood floors. We have enjoyed the complete renovation of this fine house.
San Diego, Calif., Frank and Lauren Becker Downey
We are the proud sixth owners and guardians of the historically design ated Laura A. Tyler House, built in 1913 in what is now Golden Hills, gust up the hill from downtown. We love our side-gabled Craftsman bungalow with its original fir floors, wide front porch. 10-foot ceilings, built-in cabnets, original windows and other fabulous architectural details, including a quirky one: the man who had the house built was a stove maker, and although the house has a chimney, it never had a fireplace.

Escanaba, Mich., John Klim and Beth Wilson
Our 1911 Prairie Style-influenced, architect-designed home began to come to life from near death after we moved here in 1995. The first thing we did was remove the foundation planting that had covered half of the first-floor windows. Working with a landscape architect and a historic-house painting consultant, we restored the house over five years. The interior has all its original fixtures except for the bathrooms and kitchen. During the restoration we discovered 1,000 original Ludowici roof tiles entombed behind a brick wall in the basement. Our philosophy is that, above all, a house must function for the family but retain its original character.

Sacramento, Calif., Nancy Trujillo
A physician, Edwin Wilder, built my bungalow next door to the main city hospital in 1901. It was rescued from potential destruction in 1982 by a previous owner/ builder who moved it across town to its present location. Dr. Wilder built a modest home of 2,000 square feet, but he was generous with its appointments. There are crown moldings around every doorway, wood paneling in the dining room, two clinker-brick fireplaces, and hand-carved banisters matching the hand carving on the exterior beams. There are 43 vintage windows, some as wide as 60 inches. As a preservationist, currently restoring another bungalow here in Sacramento, I have solidified my love and admiration for the style and feel privileged to be the caretaker of such a wonderful home.

Ashland, Ore., Jesse Hanwit
When my friend Tracy and I saw the For Sale sign in front of this house five years ago, we knew the house was a gem. Built in 1927 for Verni Victor Mills, an Ashland businessman, it had the simplicity and charm of a Craftsman bungalow hidden under renovations made over the years. Over the next three years, we brought the house down to its original wood and slowly worked at restoring it to its original beauty. The finishing touch was the carriage-house-style garage door added this past spring. It is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a great house both to look at and to live in.

Arcadia, Fla., Jackie and Dale Scogin
We purchased our 1917 bungalow in June, 2004. Two months later, we got hit by Hurricane Charley, the first of three in a row, but we are still standing strong! We painted the exterior and exposed the true beauty of the home, which has two beautiful working fireplaces, original oak floors, original glass in the windows, beamed ceilings in the living room and one original bathroom with a water closet. Our town is a very small, old town with many beautiful old homes. This has been a dream come true for us.

Deadwood, S.D., Randi Coddington
As a second-generation southern Californian, I’ve always been attracted to the Craftsman/bungalow style. My husband and I have been coming to the Sturgis South Dakota motorcycle rally for years, and we fell in love with this 1908 Craftsman in historic Deadwood long ago. We always said that if it ever came up for sale, we’d buy it and move here; it did, and here we are. It has the original woodwork and windows; an eight-light casket door; interior lanterns and dreamy sconces; quartersawn-oak floors; stained-glass interior windows; and a basketweave tile floor in the bathroom with clawfoot bathtub, foot tub and showerpan.

San Diego, Calif., Melissa and Chuck Silva
We have lived in our 1926 Craftsman bungalow for more than seven years and absolutely love it and our North Park neighborhood. Our neighbors all comment on how lucky we are that our red gumwood (we think) moldings and built-in bookshelves and buffet are all in original condition; so many in our neighborhood have been painted. We received city historic designation as the George Gans Spec House #1 for our home’s significance to the neighborhood. We remodeled the kitchen to be modern yet true to the style, including a custom-made nook and quartersawn white oak cabinetry. We look forward to many years of enjoyment in our home.

Ladonia, Texas, Joanna Davis
My search for a bungalow I could afford in the Dallas-Ft. Worth area was discouraging with prices so high. I widened my search to smaller Texas towns, and in the beautiful northeast area of the state I finally found one. Its pier-and-beam foundation needs some correction, especially toward the sun porch, and the house could use a fresh coat of paint. I love the cozy feel of the house. It has all of its original woodwork, a breakfast nook and built-in hutch, and that wonderful sun porch with nine windows with a 180-degree view and door to a small private patio.

Provo, Utah, Kurt and Viktoria Peterson
Our house is located in the Provo Historic District several blocks south of Brigham Young University. The woodwork in both the living and dining rooms is gumwood and the floors are quartersawn oak. Opposite the brick fireplace is a unique combination of three windows at the top of the wall, and the extra-wide front door is gumwood veneer inside and quartersawn oak outside with three beveled glass panels. Our house was featured in the Provo Landmarks Tour of Homes in June 2004.

BY DONALD COVINGTON

 

David and Isabel - Married in 1902 in Monrovia, California

This is the story of one man’s rise and fall, buffeted by the turns of economic fortune during his lifetime and nourished by an architectural style that would sweep through America’s cities.

The California Craftsman style was created in part by famous architects, and popularized by carpenters and independent developers. The elements of the style were used to achieve a form of home building which approached the status of folk art. It was a builder’s art form, a style that celebrated an aesthetic based upon the logic of forming a simple, forthright structure using natural materials. And, it was nurtured by the hands-on labor of many, many common craftsmen and builders.

One of those who created Craftsman homes in Southern California and as far north as central Oregon, in the years between 1900 and 1930, was David Owen Dryden. Born in 1877 on a ranch in the redwood forest of Sonoma County, Calif., Dryden later moved with his family to a farm on the southern Oregon coast. In his youth, he apprenticed with relatives in the lumbering and building trades, on the Pacific Coast, where he acquired firsthand a knowledge of wood structure, and sensitivity to the rustic quality of vernacular architecture and natural materials.

In the mid-1890s, at the age of 18, David Dryden moved with a sister and brother-in-law to the small orchard community of Monrovia, Calif., in the San Gabriel Valley, a few miles east of Pasadena. In that small foothills community, in 1902, David met and married Isabel Rockwood. Together, David and Isabel launched a career of home building and decorating. David created structures in the typical builder’s bungalow style of the day. Isabel collaborated with him on functional planning and chose colors and other enhancements of interior elements. As gardens were considered to be integral parts of the whole plan, Isabel chose plants and supervised the placement of landscape elements.

In Los Angeles, David worked odd jobs, including that of a Tram Conuctor on the Boyle Heights Line, Before becoming a carpenter in the thriving home building industry in the community of Monrovia

In their early years in Monrovia, the Drydens purchased building sites, completed structures and moved into them for the finishing phase. While David worked on a new house, Isabel turned a recently completed one into a functioning and artfully decorated home. As their reputation for creating handsome, stylish bungalows grew, they were constantly on the move from completed home to new structure. One year they moved eight times.

David Dryden’s aesthetics gradually evolved from the ubiquitous bungalow of the early 1 900s to the more romantic “chalet” style, made popular throughout the San Gabriel Valley by the Greene brothers and their contemporaries. The Craftsman style that emerged in the first decade of the century turned the builder’s craft into an expressive art form, and often, as in Dryden’s case, made the house carpenter a folk artist.

By 1911, after a decade of developing his craft and mastering the new style, Dryden moved from Monrovia to San Diego where a building boom had begun in preparation for the 1915-16 Panama- California Exposition celebrating the opening of the Panama Canal. It was in the new suburbs of Point Loma, Mission Hills and North Park that the mature phase of Dryden’s Craftsman style developed.

Dryden’s San Diego houses affirm the harmony of shelter and earth through the combination of natural materials and structure, expressing the concepts of the Craftsman movement. Deep eaves supported by a variety of brackets and beams are capped by broad, low-pitched roof lines. The roof structure hovers above walls of redwood shingle and board siding, which occasionally rest on foundations veneered in river-worn boulders and cobbles.

The simple, direct forms of Dryden’s houses take on a dynamic character through the contrast of solids with the open structure of pergolas and port-cocheres. The picturesque effect is always present in the exteriors and is achieved by extruded elements such as stairways, window bays, inglenooks, balconies and sun porches. Shadows patterned by open structure and textured surfaces that evoke the natural character of the material add to those effects.

Interiors of the houses contain extensive wood paneling and cabinets with leaded art glass and glazed ceramic tile. Built-in buffets, china closets and bookcases in quarter-sawn oak or red gum are typical. The open plan is achieved by wide arches between major rooms or by double, sliding pocket doors and French doors. The integration of interior and exterior space is created by continuous lines of casement windows for maximum light and ventilation.

David Dryden built 60 Bungalows in the Suburbs of San Diego Between 1911 and 1919

These houses, built in the years of the Exposition in San Diego, brought status and wealth to David Dryden who progressed from the role of a carpenter to that of an independent building contractor, supervising a crew of artisans and craftsmen. By the spring of 1915, at the peak of the San Diego building boom, Dryden’s mature Craftsman style had reached its zenith.

Dryden’s clientele steadily increased during 1916-17. His work flourished and he became known as a builder of Craftsman style houses and bungalows for the affluent new middle-class professionals and retired industrialists who, eager to escape urban congestion and colder Eastern climes, were eager to live in a genteel, semirural villa — surrounde d by orchards, gardens and lawns, a short tram ride away from the merc antile and commercial establishments of the urban center.

Creative by nature, David enjoyed the role of designer and director of construction; but he was impatient with record keeping and preferred to pay receipts from pocket cash. His lack of prudence in business affairs was matched by a disdain for money in general. Dryden’s descendants recall his throwing money away, literally, over the cliffs into the surf below.

Interior of a Classic Redwood Board and Shingle Tradition of the Craftsman Style

His lack of respect for currency, however, did not extend to the luxuries that wealth could obtain. His obsession for quality in construction also extended to other material possessions. He admired fine tailoring and fast motorcars. He was a traveler as well, and spent many summers exploring the Pacific Coast by steamer and automobile, from the Mexican border to the rivers of Oregon.

And there was a gentler side, that David Dryden revealed in the poems he wrote for his grandchildren and in rhymed notes to his mother-in-law. Letters to his wife indicated a sentimental man of tender demeanor, and one with great admiration for the beauties of the natural environment. It was this more sensitive side of his nature that suffered most from the humiliating experience which followed the failure of his once robust career.

With the entrance of the United States into World War I in 1917, real estate and building businesses took a sudden nose dive. Shortages of man-power and materials made house construction a difficult and expensive venture. A national influenza epidemic also helped depress the economy. Dryden found it hard to gain enough commissions to ensure payment for the many high interest loans to which he was committed. With the need to cope with the ebbing tide of fortune that had once brought him wealth and security, Dryden apparently succumbed to questionable business practices and, eventually, to alcohol abuse.

A rash of liens and lawsuits for unpaid bills mounted against Dryden and, in the late winter of 1918-19, the Drydens left San Diego. Isabel and the children remained in the Los Angeles area while David returned to Oregon to recover emotionally and financially from the personal catastrophe which had devastated his life and career. He moved north to the Umpqua River where he worked with some success as a carpenter building houses and barns for $5.50 a day, a decent wage at the time.

By the winter of 1920-21, with new resolve and somewhat financially recovered, David and Isabel returned to San Diego where they began anew to acquire land for construction. The Craftsman style that had been popular the first two decades of the century had lost its appeal in the postwar years, however, and Dryden gradually shifted from the frame bungalow to the more modish stucco and tile “hacienda.” The Spanish Revival style, initiated by the seductive charms of’ the lath and plaster palaces of the 1915 Panama-California Exposition and reinforced by Hollywood films, spread across the new suburbs of the 1920s, not only in San Diego but throughout California.

In the summer of 1925, the Drydens moved to the San Francisco Bay area, where David gained a second small fortune continuing to build stucco bungalows in the popular Mediterranean style. Dryden’s masterpieces, however, remain the romantic Craftsman villas and bungalows that he created in the years before World War I.

It is a tribute to the quality of his craft that most of David Dryden’s houses from his early career in San Diego are well-cared for today. Many of them, having survived modernizat ion and change, grace the old suburb and neighborhoods north of Balboa Park, echoing the serene lifestyle of a distant era.

While vacationing in Northern California during the summer of 1946, David Owen Dryden died on the picturesque Pacific coast that nourished his early aesthetic awareness.


Preservation, restoration and heritage are the major themes of the newest issue of American Bungalow. For those who aren’t subscribers or haven’t yet picked up a copy from their favorite dealer or newsstand, here’s a preview.

The story of Phoenix’s historic Orpheum Theatre—which opened in January 1929, skirted demolition in the 1980s and was restored to its original splendor in the mid-1990s—follows the arc of Phoenix’s history through nearly eight decades, from the glory days of the city’s boom years in the twenties, through the Great Depression, to Post–WW II suburban growth and urban abandonment, and finally to the renaissance of a vibrant downtown core over the past decade.


“Oh, You’ll Miss Me, Honey: When Phoenix Changed Its Mind and Saved the Orpheum,” says that the restoration, completed in 1994, is not just a monument to the age of vaudeville but also “a small miracle of historic preservation accomplished through an episode of cultural, civic and political imagination.” The story is online here, but to see how Alexander Vertikoff’s photos capture the restoration in all its extravagant, over-the-top glory, you’ll have to pick up the magazine; the Web just can’t do justice to this grand theater palace.

“Light, River, Rock, Tree: Phantom Ranch’s Elemental Music” is a stunning portrait of Mary Jane Colter’s Phantom Ranch, a rustic cabin resort on the floor of the Grand Canyon. The article is the first in a new series on the melding of European-American Arts and Crafts, Spanish Missionary and Native-American Indian cultures that took place in the American Southwest in the decades bridging the 1880s and the 1920s, giving rise to the “Southwest style.”

Drawing heavily on Native American and Spanish Mission arts, crafts and building designs, the Southwest style’s emergence coincided with the bungalow era, and Southwest artifacts and furnishings soon became the decor of choice for bungalow living.

Craftsman-era gems
Three residential gems from the Craftsman era highlight regional variations in early-20th-century design. One, in the Laurelhurst neighborhood of Portland, Ore., has simply been well treated and carefully preserved. The other two, in Kansas City, Mo., and San Diego, Calif., have been meticulously restored—in K.C. over 15 years and in San Diego over 40.

“If you don’t look too closely,” writes the author of the Portland story, “the 1915 home, with its high square center flanked on both sides by lower, projecting front blocks, looks as though it could have been built around 1955—either that, or perhaps centuries ago, in Moorish Spain. The abundance of leaded and stained glass gives it away, though, as do the elaborate interior trim and a built-in buffet made to rival the most well-appointed Arts and Crafts homes.

“Nancy and Victor Rhodes, who bought the house as a starter home in 1973, have now settled into it as their place of retirement. And over the three and a half decades they’ve lived there, they’ve come not just to love it but to know it, patiently piecing together its history.”

In Kansas City, the popular local TV news reporter Stan Carmack had begun restoring a historic 1910 Hyde Park limestone Craftsman foursquare when he owned it briefly in the 1970s. In 1994, Jae McKeown and Robin Rusconi bought it and began the work of completing the restoration. Their meticulous craftsmanship and discerning taste in period furnishings have given the century-old parkside home a new lease on life that would make its architect, the prolific Clarence Erasmus Shepard, proud.

And in San Diego, when Carolyn and Tom Owen-Towle bought a gracefully proportioned but somewhat faded Craftsman home in the city’s historic Bankers Hill neighborhood in 1978, they thought colorful paint and great-looking rugs were all it would take to bring it back to life. But the couple, then new co-ministers (and now ministers emeriti) at San Diego’s First Unitarian Universalist Church, asked local architectural historian and preservationist Rurik Kallis to restore a damaged window.

Kallis complied, then suggested restoring the window seat beneath it … and then the entire room. When they saw the result, they realized they had begun a journey of restoration they would have to complete, no matter how long it took. “We felt a responsibility—almost a calling, really—to reclaim that beauty,” Carolyn says. Forty years later, they’ve brought it all back home. And because Carolyn is the daughter of the famed California artist, arts educator and curator Millard Owen Sheets, the stately yet festive home today houses a substantial collection of Sheets’s own luminous paintings and of the world art he and Carolyn’s mother collected during their decades of travel abroad.

Finally, in this issue’s “From Our Friends” essay, San Antonio architect J. Douglas Lipscomb, AIA, argues that the kind of design excellence Vitruvius advocated during the reign of Augustus Caesar sometime before 27 B.C.—and that is still the foundation of successful and healthy communities today—can be found in our modest American bungalows, which have proved durable, adaptable and filled with delight.


In February 2009, the San Diego Historical Society, which for many years operated the 1905 Marston House as a house museum under a lease with the City of San Diego, announced that it would not renew its lease, citing among other reasons its mission and current economic conditions. This announcement stirred widespread fear in the historic-preservation community–not just in San Diego but throughout the country–that the house might be closed to the public, perhaps permanently. That fear, in turn, prompted urgent appeals for another preservation organization to step in and offer to work with the city to preserve and maintain the house as a historic museum open to the public.

On March 3, 2009, Bruce Coons, Executive Director of San Diego’s Save Our Heritage Organisation, issued the following announcement:

Save Our Heritage Organisation Board of Directors in a special meeting of the board on Monday, March 2, 2009 has voted to announce that we are willing to pursue operations of the historic Marston House for the City of San Diego. This decision was made in response to the tremendous number of requests from our membership and the general public.

SOHO has received the endorsement of the Friends of the Marston House, whose membership met on Saturday, February 28. We are pleased to receive their support and partnership in furthering our mutual goals for the preservation and operation of the Marston House.

The house, which was originally built for George Marston and his family in 1905 by architects William S. Hebbard and Irving J. Gill, became a house museum after the Marston family left it to the City of San Diego in 1987 for the enjoyment of the public. The San Diego Historical Society had operated it since that time. Last month the Society, citing among other reasons their mission and economic conditions, decided to allow their lease to expire.

SOHO has the proven and unique capacity to develop the Marston House into one of California’s premiere house museums. Our philosophy is that historic sites have the unique ability of being able to inspire, and that through their authenticity and the stories of people who lived and worked in them, they stir the imagination and inspire people in a myriad of ways that will be key to the renaissance of this important landmark home.

American Bungalow’s Winter 2005 feature on the Marston House can be read here.