A. H. Beach House

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The A. H. Beach House, also known as the Bergman House is an historic Queen Anne style mansion, considered late American Queen Anne style, located in San Diego County, in the city of Escondido, California. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in San Diego County on December 30, 1993.

A.H. Beach House
A. H. Beach House is located in San Diego County, California
A. H. Beach House
A. H. Beach House is located in California
A. H. Beach House
A. H. Beach House is located in the United States
A. H. Beach House
Location700 South Juniper, San Diego County Escondido, California 92025
Coordinates33°7′4″N 117°4′25″W / 33.11778°N 117.07361°W / 33.11778; -117.07361
Built1896
Architectural styleQueen Anne Victorian
NRHP reference No.93001462
Added to NRHPDecember 30, 1993

History edit

The corner lot, in the Stanley Heights Addition, was owned by the Escondido Land and Town Company before being purchased by A. H. Beach in 1887. The house, built in Queen Anne style architecture, was finished in 1896. Beach did not live there long and the house was purchased by Henry W. Putnam in 1900. Putnam was a businessman, inventor, and manufacturer. He invented a fence wire barbing machine,[1] and improvements,[2] Putnam was from Bennington, Vermont.[3]

Putnam retired to San Diego in 1905 and William Jereslaw lived at the residence with his nieces Suzette and Miriam Kuhn from 1905 until 1909. From 1909 until 1914 Appleton Shaw and Amelia Timken Bridges lived in the mansion. Amelia was the daughter of Henry and Fredericka Timken. Henry was the founder of Timken Roller Bearing Company. W. H. Baldridge, pharmacist and drugstore owner, was a resident of Escondido since 1887. W.H. and his wife Fannie bought the house in 1914 and lived there until 1917. Matthew and Martha Cassou owned the estate from 1917 until 1945. Bernard and Irene Cesmat bought the residence in 1945 and lived there until selling it to Virgil and Natalie Bergman in 1968. The Bergman's restored the home with some modern updates.[4][5]

Recent history edit

Art dealer and collector Harry Parashis and his wife, Letitia, bought the home in 1997, and spent several years bringing it to its "original Victorian ornate grandeur.".[6] In 2016 the house and property sold for $1,200,000.00.[7]

Architecture edit

The NRHP lists the house as Late Victorian as a sub of Queen Anne. It is a 2+12-story multi-gable house with a wood-and-shingle roof and fish scale siding,[8]

References edit

  1. ^ Patent: Fence-wire-barbing machine- Retrieved 2017-09-07
  2. ^ Patent: Improvement in wire-bending machines for bale-ties- Retrieved 2017-09-07
  3. ^ The Vermont Encyclopedia: (pp. 53)- Retrieved 2017-09-08
  4. ^ NRHP registration form: (pp. 6-9) - Retrieved 2017-09-09
  5. ^ The Beach House- Retrieved 2017-09-09
  6. ^ Pinterest: Harry Parashis and Letitia restored home in 1997- Retrieved 2017-09-01
  7. ^ Oldhousedreams.com Archived 2017-09-10 at the Wayback Machine- Retrieved 2017-09-09
  8. ^ Fish-Scale Shingle Siding Holds True To Victorian Architecture- Retrieved 2017-09-01