629 C Street
629 C Street
Colonial Revival, 1931
This L-plan Colonial Revival house has a moderately pitched gable roof. A projecting south wing is surmounted by a parallel side gable roof at a lightly lower pitch. The front eave of this roof is pierced by a center gable roofed, dormer like projection which extends upward from the east wall. The odd roof line suggests that the projecting wing may have been added after the original construction of the rectangular, symmetrically fenestrated Colonial cottage. The entry stoop is covered by a projecting pediment supported on thin, cylindrical columns. Cottage windows with multi-glazed upper sashes flank the glazed entry door. A tripartite window is found on the south side of the facade, while the north side has paired double hung windows. The house is clad with novelty siding with brick facing on the lower portion of the wall. The house appears to retain its integrity of design, materials and workmanship, setting, feeling and association.
From the State of California Resources Agency, Department of parks and Recreation, Primary Record, November 1994