East
Alvarado Historical District Map, Information & Homes
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East Alvarado Historic District
A Stretch of Time
Near the
central core of Phoenix
lies a quiet stretch of pavement less than one-quarter
mile in length. Within that quarter-mile, a collection
of 30 homes comprise the compact neighborhood called
East Alvarado
- a neighborhood whose evolution traces the history of
Phoenix and illustrates a pivotal phase in the
development of both the Valley and the nation.
Located on East Alvarado Road, between Third and Seventh
Street, the
East Alvarado District evolved from the
accumulated forces of nature, politics, and the dreams
of strong-willed individuals dreams that traced their
roots to the earliest days of the city and beyond.
Up From The Ashes
Befitting the mythic origins of its name, the city of
Phoenix rose from the ashes of an ancient culture. A
people called the HoHoKam are thought to have occupied
the Salt River Valley as early as the third century B.
C. They thrived in this desert setting by constructing a
sophisticated system of canals to deliver the waters of
the Salt River throughout the Valley, providing
irrigation for the stapes of their diet corn, beans and
squash. Although the HoHoKam would vanish from the
Valley in the 15th century, the canal system remained
lying dormant for the next 400 years.
In 1865, the U.S. Army established Camp McDowell, twenty
miles north east of the Valley. The resulting demand for
supplies drew attention to the river below where a man
named Jack Swilling uncovered the ingenious canals of
the HoHoKam. Described as equal parts soldier, deserter,
prospector and promoter, Swilling formed a business that
began to revitalize the waterways and cultivate land
along the north bank of the Salt River. His activities
drew additional settlers, giving birth, in 1870 to the
town of Phoenix.
Taking Nature's Cue
As the waters granted Phoenix
life, they also checked its early growth and form. The
seasonality of the river flows saved the city from the
frenzied fluctuations of the western boomtown syndrome,
nurturing instead a paced and steady rise. Drought would
curb rapid accelerations in growth, while
alternating floods along the Salt River gave a northward
push to development as residents abandoned low-lying
areas, moving north along the square-mile grids
established at eh city's founding. Center Street, now
Central Avenue, became the major north-south
thoroughfare, thriving with commercial and residential
development. On the eve of the 20th century, the future
site of East Alvarado was still two miles north of the
city's center.
Building Momentum
By the late 19th century, the components were assembled
to pave the way for dramatic growth in the Valley. In
1885, the opening of the Arizona Canal brought
irrigation to an additional 100,000 acres of desert
land. In 1888, the railroad came to Phoenix. And in
1889, the city was selected as
the Territorial Capital. All the while, demand for
agricultural products was on the rise.
The population of Phoenix tripled between 1885 and 1890.
But the alternating plagues of floods and droughts
persisted. It became evident that to provide for
continued, stable growth the waters of
the Salt River must be tamed.
Leading The Charge
In 1895, Dwight B. Heard arrived in Phoenix. A
young assistant credit manager with a Chicago hardware
firm, Heard was forced to make the move because of
weakened health. A seemingly unlikely candidate to
pioneer the rugged deserts, Heard was in fact from solid
stock. His ancestors were among the hardy lot to
colonize 17th century New England. With equal vigor,
Heard took to the 19th century West.
By 1897, Heard had established an investment company and
was actively engaged in raising crops and cattle. His
business activities quickly revealed the limitations of
the fickle waters of the Salt River. He became an active
force in promoting federal efforts to control water in
the dese4rt. Heard's tireless efforts were rewarded with
passage of the 1902 National Reclamation Act. The Act
provided needed funds for construction of the Roosevelt
Dam which, when completed in 1911, stabilized the
Valley's water supply and provided a platform for
unparalleled agricultural expansion and economic growth.
Drawing Up Dreams
In 1903, anticipating the prosperity his
political efforts would bring Heard and his wife Maie,
ventured north along Central Avenue and constructed a
6,000-square-foot Spanish colonial Revival
mansion at the corner of Monte Vista and Central. The
home, named
"Casa Blanca" would become the anchor for an
entire quarter section of land that Heard subdivided in
1909 Ranging from Central Avenue to Seventh Street and
McDowell Road to Oak Street, Heard called his new
subdivision "Los Olivos" and divided the 160
acres into 32 parcels of five acres each. Originally
intended for upscale, estate size homes, the project was
ahead of its time. The market demanded smaller
homesites, and Los Olivos was resurveyed and
replatted numerous times between 1909 and 1919 to meet
this demand.
By the mid-1920's, activity spurred by the reclamation
projects created an explosive period of residential
construction throughout the Valley. Construction moved
at a rapid pace in Alvarado Place, a development located
at the northwest corner of the Los Olivos subdivision.
In 1929, East Alvarado Road was extended out of Alvarado
Place from Third Street to within 100 feet of Seventh
Street. Two tracts were recorded, and the East Alvarado
neighborhood was born.
Fits and Starts
The real estate firm of Greene and Griffin
enthusiastically promoted East Alvarado. In 1930,
the firm's construction partner, Home Builders, Inc.
built the first home in East Alvarado as a speculative
venture. Designed by C. Lewis Kelly, this "spec" house
showcased the Spanish colonial Revival Style, then the
most popular style of the day.
Popular styles, however soon gave way to much larger
forces as the decade of the 1930's brought
depression on a worldwide scale. Though its vibrant
economy resisted, Phoenix also had succumbed to the
economic malaise by the mid-1930's. Government action
would once more step in to jumpstart the fortunes of
Phoenix.
With roots tracing back to housing shortages following
World War I, federal housing programs were beginning to
mature. Passage of the National Housing Act of 1934
created programs to foster an increase in individual
home ownership throughout the country. Additional
impetus was provided locally through the efforts of
Arizona's powerful congressional delegation. Led by
Senator Carl Hayden, the legislators were responsible
for a rise in employment - stemming from government
projects.
The Advent Of The Ranch
The Federal Housing
Administration (FHA), established under the National
Housing Ace, would in large part mole the look of
housing throughout the country during the next few
decades. The FHA's requirements for standardized house
forms, materials, and construction methods moved styling
away from the romanticized Period Revivals of the 1920's
to a simplified style, now called the Ranch Style.
With financing bolstered by FHA loan insurance, the new
ranch styles became prolific. The 1930 "spec" house had
remained the sole dwelling in East Alvarado until
1937. But fueled by the FHA and employment from
additional government initiatives, the remaining 29 East
Alvarado homes would be constructed in only five years.
Based on FHA theory, East Alvarado was promoted
as a model home development. The efforts included
establishing outreach programs to inform the public of
improvements in construction standards, encouraging home
ownership, and increasing awareness of FHA mortgage
financing. With uniform lots, setbacks and scale of
structures, East Alvarado exemplified the "streetscape
concept" promoted by the FHA to create uniformity and
continuity of design, with the intention of enhancing
sales and protecting real estate values.
Through the continued involvement of Homebuilders, Inc.,
East Alvarado would flourish. The homes that were
produced are generally known as Early Ranch or Minimal
Traditional Style. There are several variations of the
Early Ranch, including the Monterey-influenced Early
Ranch house, characterized by tits "L"- shaped plan and
low-pitched roof, and the French Provincial Ranch with
its characteristic hipped roof and cornice molding at
the eaves. Retaining a hint of the old, East Alvarado
also contains several versions of simplified Period
Revival Styles.
The Ranch Becomes Ubiquitous
East Alvarado evidences the emergence of
an architectural form that would come to epitomize the
modern American West. From its origins in the late
1930s, the Ranch Style house reflected the economics of
the times. Simplicity and adaptability of size and
layout allowed the style to flourish, particularly in
Phoenix where it would become the dominant design of the
1940's and beyond.
East
Alvarado stands as testimony to a period of critical
transition in the residential architecture of
Phoenix - a model for the "suburban ranch" neighborhoods
that would follow.
Information, maps
and photographs provided courtesy:
Historic Preservation Office of the City of Phoenix
Neighborhood Services Department
200 West Washington Street
Phoenix, Arizona 85003
(602) 261-8699 |
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Laura Boyajian
Mobile: 602.400.0008
HistoricCentralPhoenix@cox.net
HomeSmart, LLC
5225 N. Central Ave. #104
Phoenix, AZ 85012 (602)
400.0008
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