Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Camarillo Ranch House, also known as Rancho Calleguas and Adolfo Camarillo House, is a Queen Anne-style Victorian house in Camarillo, California. Built in 1892, the 6,000-square-foot (560 m 2 ) house was designed by architects Herman Anlauf and Franklin Ward.
201 Camarillo Ranch Rd. Camarillo: Fifteen-room house built in 1892 by the Camarillo family, after whom the City of Camarillo is named 10: Case Study House No. 28: Case Study House No. 28: July 24, 2013 : 91 Inverness Rd.
Don Adolfo Camarillo House: 201 Camarillo Ranch Rd. Camarillo: 4/69: Built in 1893 9: Santa Clara Schoolhouse: 20030 Telegraph Rd. Santa Paula: 4/69: Colonial style one-room schoolhouse with high tower, built 1896–97, also known as Little Red Schoolhouse [9] 10: Tapo Adobe Ruins: 4651 Tapo Canyon Rd.
The Camarillo Ranch House is a Queen Anne Victorian style home that was built in 1892 by Camarillo and several other workers; the house was a cultural and social hub that was the center of the ranch. Camarillo enlisted the services of architects Franklin Ward and Herman Anlauf. Camarillo used his ranch mostly for growing crops.
Fenyes Estate; Ferdinand Backs House; Fern Cottage (California) Bernardo Fernandez House; Filoli; James W. Finch House; Fontana Farms Company Ranch House, Camp No. 1; Forest Home Farms; Forestiere Underground Gardens; Emmanuel Franz House; Arthur Monroe Free House
Camarillo Ranch House; Carson Mansion; Carter House Inn; Cecil Ranch; Chambers Mansion; Charles Lais House; William S. Clark House; Cohn House (Folsom, California) Combellack–Blair House; Maj. George Beecher Cook House; C. Z. Culver House
C. Caldwell House (Shelbyville, Kentucky) Camarillo Ranch House; Carl Jacobsen House; Casa de Ferro; Charles Lundberg Three-Decker; William Merritt Chase Homestead
Juan E. Camarillo Jr. (April 10, 1867 – August 21, 1936) was a wealthy Californio landowner and philanthropist in Ventura County, California, United States. Juan and his elder brother Adolfo Camarillo lived in Casa Camarillo, and were involved in the mercantile business. [ 1 ]