Rehorn Home
1050 S Street
On February 1, 2016, the Rehorn home was destroyed by fire. Frank Rehorn (1862-1916) was a pioneer building contractor who figured heavily in the growth of Fresno from its early days as a shack town to its emergence as the San Joaquin Valley's first high-rise city. He was an outspoken member of the Citizen's Alliance, and the first president of the Builder's Exchange. These organizations were born out of anti-union sentiment during the period that the Rehorn Home was designed and built. The house was at the center of no less than three well-publicized strikes and took well over twelve months to complete due to delays inflicted by union pickets. In March 1905, during one of Rehorn's numerous skirmishes with the unions, his office mysteriously burned to the ground. He was not a popular man within union circles because of his commitment to the open shop concept. Curbside public gatherings, political oratory, street brawls and mass jailings were common news in the community, and Frank Rehorn was vocally involved and much quoted in the papers regarding many such occurrences.
After Frank Rehorn's death, the home was sold to H. H. Holland (1872-1941). The Holland family sold the residence to the Roman Catholic diocese after H. H. Holland's death in 1941, and it was used as a convent by the Sisters of the Holy Cross until 1970. By 1973, the home had been in use for several years as the Villa Carmel Home for unwed mothers. The house sat vacant in 1974, until it fell prey to the communal student housing craze, which left its own set of hallucinatory markings on the old residence. Architects Allen Y. Lew and William E. Patnaude purchased the Rehorn residence in 1976, and launched an ambitious rehabilitation project to restore the dilapidated structure for use as their architectural office.
The Rehorn Home, designed in the Georgian Revival style by Alexander C. Swartz, was completed in 1906. It was one of several mansions built in the Cathedral District by prominent members of the lumber and building industries. Frank Rehorn (1862-1916) was a pioneer building contractor who figured heavily in the growth of Fresno from its early days as a shack town to its emergence as the San Joaquin Valley's first high-rise city. After Rehorn's death, the home was sold to H. H. Holland (1872-1941). The Holland family sold the residence to the Roman Catholic diocese in 1941, and it was used as a convent until 1970. By 1973, the home had been in use for several years as the Villa Carmel Home for unwed mothers. By 1974, it was used for communal student housing, which left its own set of hallucinatory markings on the old residence. Architects Allen Y. Lew and William E. Patnaude purchased the Rehorn residence in 1976, and launched an ambitious rehabilitation project to restore the dilapidated structure for use as their architectural office.
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The Rehorn Home, located at S and Mariposa Streets in downtown
Fresno, is characteristically Georgian Revival in detail. The
4027-square-foot, sixteen-room house is wrapped by a broad balustrade
porch to the west and southwest. This porch stretches slightly
off-center along the front elevation of the residence. Both a
formally symmetrical entrance portico and a single side portico sport
stacked quoined brick columns paired with traditional ionic columns.
Each portico is capped by a "widow's walk," which matches
the baluster detail on the lower porch.
A pale grey antioch sandbrick articulates the
corners of the home with irregularly-sized canton quoins. The facade
is laid up in a stretcher bond pattern and is punched by rather
severe window penetrations distinctly lacking in ornament. Painted
wooden window casements are deeply set back and accentuated by a
simple brick sill and a steel lintel with overscaled bridge riveting.
All exterior woodwork is painted white, which lends much to the
formal impression of the building. Two full-length single-pane
sidelights flank a simple colonial six-paneled front door. The
entrance is trimmed with delicately ornamented casework. A pair of
full ancons, two split ancons, and two fluted urns are mounted at
each side and above the door. A three-light clerestory head is set
above the front door and completes the front entry scheme. Directly
above the front portico, a round pediment forms a fan window, which
crowns a three-light Palladian opening. This elaborate second-story
window treatment terminates in an open tympan pediment, which breaks
through the horizontality of the hip roof. With the exception of the
porch, the front elevation is composed on a strict central axis. A
simple cornice molding with running ionic details and block
modillions completes the uppermost mill details along the eave. Upon
entering the Rehorn residence, an overscaled entry hall is dominated
by a magnificently conceived open stairway constructed with rare
museum-quality "rope molding" newell post and balusters.
In 1919 new owner H. H. Holland hired architects
Edward
Glass and Charles
Butner to remodel the home. Glass and Butner's
remodeling included minor changes to the existing interior, but added
three second-floor sleeping porches. Many architectural and
structural changes were made during the period 1941-1970, when the
home was owned by the Sisters of the Holy Cross. These changes
included the addition of cubicle partitions and dormitory-style bath
and toilet facilities.
Since 1976, when present owners Allen Y. Lew and
William E. Patnaude bought the house, the original floor plan has
been effectively restored. They have removed many of the
modifications that had turned the home into a honeycomb of spartan
cubicles. Characteristic mill details that, over time, had been
severely altered or stripped from the building, have been restored in
keeping with historically accurate models. The Rehorn Home currently
reflects a plan that approximates the architecture of the building as
remodeled by Glass and Butner in 1919. A detached garage structure
(1912) and a single-story caretaker's wing (1942) also remain on the
property.
On the evening of 1 February 2016 the Rehorn Home
was completely destroyed by a fire.
Historical significance
The Rehorn Home, begun in late 1904 or early 1905,
was one of several mansions built in the Cathedral District by
prominent members of the lumber and building industries. Frank Rehorn
(1862-1916) was a pioneer building contractor who figured heavily in
the growth of Fresno from its early days as a shack town to its
emergence as the San Joaquin Valley's first high-rise city. He was an
outspoken member of the Citizen's Alliance, and the first president
of the Builder's Exchange. These organizations were born out of
anti-union sentiment during the period that the Rehorn Home was
designed and built. The house was at the center of no less than three
well-publicized strikes and took well over twelve months to complete
due to delays inflicted by union pickets. In March 1905, during one
of Rehorn's numerous skirmishes with the unions, his office
mysteriously burned to the ground. He was not a popular man within
union circles because of his commitment to the open shop concept.
Curbside public gatherings, political oratory, street brawls and mass
jailings were common news in the community, and Frank Rehorn was
vocally involved and much quoted in the papers regarding many such
occurrences.
After Frank Rehorn's death, the home was sold to
H. H. Holland (1872-1941). The Holland family sold the residence to
the Roman Catholic diocese after H. H. Holland's death in 1941, and
it was used as a convent by the Sisters of the Holy Cross until 1970.
By 1973, the home had been in use for several years as the Villa
Carmel Home for unwed mothers. The house sat vacant in 1974, until it
fell prey to the communal student housing craze, which left its own
set of hallucinatory markings on the old residence. Architects Allen
Y. Lew and William E. Patnaude purchased the Rehorn residence in
1976, and launched an ambitious rehabilitation project to restore the
dilapidated structure for use as their architectural office.
Adapted from the National Register of Historic
Places nomination, originally prepared by John Edward Powell.
--------------------
In a lot of ways, this house symbolizes Fresno. Rehorn was an early
contractor/builder in the Fresno area. He was an anti-union builder,
who lead both the builders of the era and the anti-union forces in
Fresno. Work on this house was stopped three times during its
building because of union protests. Once Rehorn's office was burnt to
the ground. After Rehorn's death the Holland family bought the house
and it was eventually sold to the Catholic Church. It was a turned
into a convent. In 1973 it became the Villa Carmel House-a house for
unwed mothers. But within a year, it was abandoned and was used for
communal student housing, which lefts its own particular mark on the
house. Finally in 1976, it was purchased by a couple of local
architects and remodeled and used for their offices.
----
The Rehorn Home, begun in late 1904 or early 1905, was one of several
mansions built in the Cathedral District by prominent members of the
lumber and building industries. Frank Rehorn (1862-1916) was a
pioneer building contractor who figured heavily in the growth of
Fresno from its early days as a shack town to its emergence as the
San Joaquin Valley's first high-rise city.
After Rehorn's death, the home was sold to H. H. Holland (1872-1941). The Holland family sold the residence to the Roman Catholic diocese after H. H. Holland's death in 1941, and it was used as a convent by the Sisters of the Holy Cross until 1970. By 1973, the home had been in use for several years as the Villa Carmel Home for unwed mothers. The house sat vacant in 1974, until it fell prey to the communal student housing craze, which left its own set of hallucinatory markings on the old residence. Architects Allen Y. Lew and William E. Patnaude purchased the Rehorn residence in 1976, and launched an ambitious rehabilitation project to restore the dilapidated structure for use as their architectural office.
After Rehorn's death, the home was sold to H. H. Holland (1872-1941). The Holland family sold the residence to the Roman Catholic diocese after H. H. Holland's death in 1941, and it was used as a convent by the Sisters of the Holy Cross until 1970. By 1973, the home had been in use for several years as the Villa Carmel Home for unwed mothers. The house sat vacant in 1974, until it fell prey to the communal student housing craze, which left its own set of hallucinatory markings on the old residence. Architects Allen Y. Lew and William E. Patnaude purchased the Rehorn residence in 1976, and launched an ambitious rehabilitation project to restore the dilapidated structure for use as their architectural office.
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