City’s oldest house perishes in fire
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Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- A historical landmark was lost last week when the
city’s oldest house burned down to the ground.
Fire officials are still investigating last Wednesday’s blaze that
completely engulfed the Northam Ranch Building by Yorktown Avenue and
Lake Street, across from City Hall.
A group of residents had hoped to restore the abandoned home. The group,
made up of members of the Huntington Beach Historical Society, toured the
property in January.
“We could actually visualize the house brought to life,” said Cathy
Green, a Historical Society member.
That dream went up in smoke.
“I’m horrified,” she said.
The Victorian-era home stood on its grassy knoll for more than 100 years.
Back then, the mansion and carriage house stood watch over 1,400 acres of
wide-open agricultural land.
“You could see everything from there,” said Connie Mandic, another
Historical Society member and a city planning commissioner.
Colonel Robert J. Northam, who owned all the surrounding land, had the
house moved there in 1897 from its original spot in Buena Park. With the
high cost of lumber at the time, moving a house was cheaper than building
a new one.
In the early 1900s, a group of real estate investors, known as the
Huntington Beach Co., took over the residence and the land. The ranch
house became the company’s base of operations over the years, with many
of its local managers staying there.
In the ‘70s and ‘80s, development crowded around, but the house remained
isolated behind trees and brush.
As recently as the mid-1980s, the best Christmas bashes in town were held
there, Green said.
“You had to be on that [guest] list to be anybody,” she said.
The property fell into disrepair soon after local developer PLC Land Co.
took over in 1996, Mandic said.
Since May 1998, the house was supposed to remain vacant, but vandals and
vagrants kept breaking in, said Bill Holman, the development company’s
director of planning and government relations.
“It was impossible to keep people out of there,” he said.
Mandic said she asked PLC to hire on-site security guards instead of just
relying on a chain-link fence and no-trespassing signs.
Fire officials suspect transients are to blame for the two-alarm fire,
said Birgit Davis, Huntington Beach Fire Department spokeswoman.
By the time fire trucks arrived at 11:19 p.m., the house was fully
engulfed in flames, she said. Because the wooden building was so old,
firefighters didn’t go in, preferring to contain the blaze, which finally
died around 5 a.m. the following day, she said.
Despite the push for restoration, PLC planned to demolish the property to
make way for 17 homes. Holman said the cost of preservation was too high.
“Who is going to pay $1 million to have a house that’s going to sit there
and become dilapidated again?” he asked.
With Northam Ranch House gone, Newland House on Beach Boulevard becomes
the city’s oldest house. That house, which is now a museum, was built in
1898.
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