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W. W. Henry Company Building, Huntington Park, 1939 Wardrobe Cleaners (now Catalina Coffee Company), Redondo Beach , 1950 Washington Firehouse (now Burgers and Brew), West Sacramento
The current home was first built in 1919, originally a two-story house in a Spanish Colonial Revival style. [2] The estate was purchased in 1931 by Stanley Chapman, son of Charles Chapman, the first Mayor of Fullerton and an important entrepreneur in the development of the Valencia orange industry in Orange County.
The Building at 399 West Fullerton Parkway is a historic apartment building at 399 West Fullerton Parkway in the Lincoln Park neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois.Built in 1926, the seventeen-story building was developed and marketed as luxury cooperative apartments for Chicago's affluent residents.
The packing house was built in 1924 by the Union Pacific Railway to complement its neighboring train station. The 23,000-square-foot (2,100 m 2) [2] packing house first shipped oranges under the Elephant label, and was later leased by grower C.C. Chapman to pack his Old Mission brand oranges.
Materiel Division, United States Army Air Corps, 24 August 1938 – 11 December 1941; Air Service Command, 11 December 1941 – 17 July 1944; Army Air Forces Materiel and Services Command, 17 July 1944 – 31 August 1944
Commissioned at an original cost of $35,000, the Muckenthaler home was built by Walter and Adella Muckenthaler in 1925 atop a hill in Fullerton. The 18-room mansion on 8.5 acres was donated to the city in 1965 by Harold Muckenthaler, who wished to see his childhood home used as a cultural center.
The Spring Field Banquet Center in Fullerton, California is a historic building built in Mission/Spanish Revival style. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1995. [ 1 ] Originally constructed in 1920 as a Masonic meeting hall, the Freemasons sold the building in 1993, due to declining membership and funds.
The West Coyote Hills is the area surrounding a ridge in northern Orange County, California. [1] It contains one of the last large open-space area in north Orange County. Parts of it lie within the city limits of La Habra, Buena Park, and La Mirada, with most of it sprawling across western Fullerton between Ralph B. Clark Regional Park and Euclid Street north of Rosecrans Ave