Wikipedia entry for Culver Crest neighborhood, Culver City, Calif.: "Youngworth Road was named for the early developer, whose home is still on the Marycrest Manor property."
The house is located at 905 Orlando Road. The permit was issued on August 3, 1926. The architectural firm was Martson, Van Pelt & Maybury, Pasadena, job #613. The builder was John H. Simpson, Pasadena.
Three children standing on a wooden boardwalk in front of a house and laundry line. Lettering on the house says: ANNO - 1916. The children are wearing traditional clothing including wide trousers ending at the knee, caps with lace and wooden clog shoes.
Text on posters partially obscured. Text on poster on left (cf. uclamss_1411_0558): Sevilla Fiestas de Primavera 1929, Semana Santa y Feria, Exposicion Ibero-Americana. Text on poster on right (cf. matching image on eBay auction item, SEVILLA FLAMENCO DANCER Vintage Embossed Sign - Seville): Sevilla Fiestas de Primavera 1924, Semana Santa y Feria.
Wikipedia entry for Culver Crest neighborhood, Culver City, Calif.: "Youngworth Road was named for the early developer, whose home is still on the Marycrest Manor property."
Woman in a floppy hat sitting on the stone railing of a staircase leading down from a stone and stucco house. The stairs lead into a garden surrounded by a wire fence. The garden contains some low bushes and a tree.
The house is located at 905 Orlando Road. The permit was issued on August 3, 1926. The architectural firm was Martson, Van Pelt & Maybury, Pasadena, job #613. The builder was John H. Simpson, Pasadena.
The house is located at 905 Orlando Road. The permit was issued on August 3, 1926. The architectural firm was Martson, Van Pelt & Maybury, Pasadena, job #613. The builder was John H. Simpson, Pasadena.
Wikipedia entry for Culver Crest neighborhood, Culver City, Calif.: "Youngworth Road was named for the early developer, whose home is still on the Marycrest Manor property."
The Heberton residence, also known as the as Casa Dracaena and El Hogar, was built by the architect George Washington Smith for himself in 1917. It was an immediate success and commissions for similar houses soon began. Ultimately Smith designed 80 houses (of which 54 were built) in the Santa Barbara area and he is often credited as starting the Spanish-Colonial Revival style of architecture in the United States.