HomeMy WebLinkAboutMarker Application 101603of College Station
Submit the completed application to the following address:
citY of College Station, bevelopment S~ices D~epartment
1101 Texas ,dlvenue, P.O. B°x f)960, College Station, TX 77842-9960
I. Applicant Information
Date of Submittal
Name of Applicant
Address
Telephone
E-mail Address
II. Owner Information
Name of Owner
Address
Telephone
E-mail Address
III. General Building ~formation
Name of Building
Address of Building
Date of Consmaction
Architect/Designer
Builder/Contractor
Architectural Period/Style
Legal
Does the building remain on its original site?
~] Yes
[--] No (specify original location)
City of College Station
Historic BuiMing Plaque AppliCation
Indicate the original and adapted uses of the building.
Original Uses
Adapted Uses
[--] Agriculture
[~] Commerce
[] Education
[--] Govermment
[--] Healthcare
[~] Industrial
~ Recreation
[~] Religious
[] Residential
[--] Social
['-] Transportation
[~ Agriculture
[-] Commerce
[-'] Education
[~] Government
~ Healthcare
Religious
Residential
[-] Social
[] Transportation
IV. rchltectural Description
A. Physical Characteristics
Number of stories
Orientation
Floor Plan
Open plan
L-plan
T-plan
Shot~ plan
Roof Type
Gable
Hipped
Flt~t with parapet
Gambrel
Mansard
Shed
Other (specify)
Original
Current
City of College Station
Historic BuiMing Plaque Application
B. Materials (Please check all that apply)
Construction
Frame
Solid Brick
Solid Stone
Original Current
Foundation
Pier and Beam
Stone ~[~
Brick
Concrete
Stucco
Stone
Brick
Windows
Wood Sash
Double-hung
Casement
Fixed
Awning
Hopper
Sliding
Other (specify)
Slate
Metal (specify type)
Other
City of College Station
Historic Building Plaque Application
V. Supporting Documentation
Please attach the following information.
Alterations
List any known changes or modifications made to the property throughout its history.
List
C. Pro
List all
mw
Fe
property.
Include original owner and subsequent owners.
Tenant History
List all knoWn tenants of the property throughout its history.
Narrative
Attach
property.
and historical development of the
Drawings
· Provide a sketch of the current site plan. Include the proposed location of the historic
plaque.
[] Provide a sketch map indicating the nominated property and any related sites.
G. Photographs
Historic
[] Provide at least one histOric photograph of the property.
Current
[]
context. For
[] Provide at
surrounding
is included.
References
Attach a list of the boo~, articles, and other sources used in preparing this form.
The College Station
the front faqade of the
Applicant Signature
City of College Station
Historic Building Plaque Application
on
Supporting Documentation
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
10.
11.
12.
13.
Alterations
1. Constructed 1950, and no subsequent alterations to the roofline have been made. The
majority of the alterations were made to interior spaces.
Carport enclosed to house utility room, storage, and shop
Washing machine relocated from kitchen to utility room
Screened play porch enclosed
Kitchen and counter extended approximately fbur feet
Plant box removed from living room
Vented space heaters removed from two bedrooms and two bathrooms
Ceiling furred down between beams m accommodate additional insulation (four-inch rock
wool batts covered with sheet rock)
Metal shower replaced with ceramic tile
Bookcases added to den
Base of lavatory enclosed and shelves constructed in bathroom
Swimming pool surrounded by chain link fence added in 1976. The swimming pool was
removed in 1996, but the chain link fence remains.
Iron railing added along the front entrance.
B. Historical Figures
Southside Development Company, Incorporated
incorporated on August 4, 1921, the Southside Development Company established the first off'-
campus residential a~ea called the College Park Addition. The develop~nent company was led by
Dr. Floyd B. Clark, professor of economics, alOng with C.W. BU~chard, Dan Scoates, R.R.
Lancaster, and M.M. Daugherty, also Texas A&M professors. The new subdivision was
developed south of campus around a small man-made lake on land purchased from Ed Hrdlicka.
Dr. William B. Bizzell, president of Texas A&M, agreed to extend the college's utility lines to the
edge of the campus property as soon as ten residences were constructed in the new subdivision.
This would allow the privately owned transmission lines to be connected to the utility lines of
Texas A&M. ~
C. Property Ownership
The deed information was taken from the following Abstracts of Title:
azos County Abstract Company, Inc. Complementary Abstract of Title to Lots Number Five
and Six of Block Number Twelve in the plan of Coll~ge Park, South East of A&M Campus,
in College Station, Brazos County, Texas for W.D. FitCh, Inc." No. 7054. 12 June 1950.
Brazos County Abstract Company, Inc. "Complementary Abstract of Title to Lots Number Five
and Six of Block Twelve, College Park Addition to tl~e City of College Station, Brazos
County, Texas for V.E Scheml~r.'' No. 7100. 1 July 1950.
Titles, Inc. "Abstract of Title to the Re-Subdivision of a Part of College Park Addition to the City
of College Station, Brazos CountY, Texas for Oakwood Realty Co~npany." No. 102.
17 March 1947.
Balliew. Deborah College Station, Texas: 1938-1988. College Station, Texas: Intaglio Press, 1987. p. 18-19.
Ayrshire - Schember
5 of 30
Grantor
Grantee Date
State of Coahuila and Texas
Joseph E. Scott
Heirs of Joseph E Scott
Joseph E. Scott 1832
Mosely Baker 1835
J. Frederick Cox 1871
Andrew J. Scott, Charlotte M. Scott, James F. Scott, M.A. Scott, Sarah L. Cox, Elizabeth Scott, J.K. Scott, R.G.
Clampitt, E.E. Clampitt, C.R. Runkle, M.J. Runkle, C.W. Runkle, S.F. Runkle, Rachel R. Wilkinson, John
Wilkinson, Samuel ~. Scott, James W. Scott, Phillip B Scott, Learnes B. Scott
J. Frederick Cox
A.C Hrdlicka
S.C. Woiton and Amelia Hrdlicka Woiton
Joseph Hrdlicka
Charles Schwartz and Frances Hrdlicka Schwartz
Creation of Hrdlicka's Southside Subdivision
A&M College of Texas 1871
Anton Dobrovling 1882
J. Pantlis 1882
A.C. Hrdlicka 1890
Mollie Cox 1891
Teckla and Joseph Hrdlicka 1893
Ed Hrdlicka 1911
J.W. Doremus 1911
Ed Hrdlicka 1913
Ed Hrdlicka 1919
John and Lillie Wallace 1921
W.T. Davis 1921
Henry Emshoff 1921
Creation of Southside Development Company, Inc.
F.B Clark, C.W. Burcha~& Dan Sco~tes, R.R, Lancaster, M.M. Daugherty
W.T. Davis
John and Lillie Wallace
Harvey Emshoff
Ed Hrdlicka
Southside Development Company, Inc.
Mrs. J.T.L. McNew
1921
Southside Development Company, Inc. 1921
Southside Development Company, Inc. 1922
Southside Development Company, Inc. 1923
Southside Development Company, Inc. 1921
Southside Development Com~oany, Inc. 1922
Southside DevelOpment Company, Inc 1923
Southside Develo~oment Company~ Inc 1925
Mr. and Mrs. J.T.L. McNew 1937
Mr. and Mrs. 'Victor Schember 1949
Construction of current home
**See the page 26 of the attachments for a map of the early subdivisions of the J.E. Scott League.
Tenant History
Original residents still reside at this address.
511 Ayrshire - Schember 6 of 30
E. Narrative History
Historical Significance
This diagram, taken from the Abstract of
Title compiled for t~he Oakwood Realty
Company in 1947, illus~ates the locations
of some of the original land grants in the
College Station area_
The history of the Schember house begins with the land on
which it is situated. The land was once part of a larger tract
of land known as the J.E. Scott League. Joseph Scott, one of
the early settlers in this area, receive~ this land from The State
of Coal~uila and Texas in a grant dated November 22, 1832.
Scott moved from the northe~m United States as a participant
in the colonization enterprise Contracted with the Government
of The State of Coahuil~ and Texas by Empresario Stephen F.
Austin. He selected a league of land situated east of the
Brazos River and adjacent t~) the league granted to Richard
Carter, who is known as "College Station's first resident."
Ownership of the J.E. Scott League eventually passed to the
Scott descendants by inheritance, and, throughout history, the
land Was divided int~ several different tracts.
Through the years, Texas A&M University, then known as Texas A&M College, slowly grew
north of the original J.E. Sc,o, tt L need for development was
recognized in tl~e early 1920 s. Company was
R.R. Lancaster, and
M.M. College Park Addition, the
first off-c land south of campus, around a small
man-made lake (see 27 of attaChmenfs). Dr. William B.
Bizzell, president of to the edge of the
campus subdivision. This would
allow the of Texas A&M.3
This newly established subdivision was quite popular and grew quickly as many professors and
other residents constructed new homes. ~he $;u~hside Dev~iopm~nt C(~mpany sold the particular
lots with which this narrative is concerned to Mr. and Mrs. JiT.L. McNe~v i~ 1941. Victor and
Marion Schember purchased three of these fifty-foot wide tots on the comer of Bell and Ayrshire
Streets from Mrs. I~lcNew in 1949.4
Victor and Marion Schember first moved to College Station from Michigan shortly after their
marriage on June 17, 1939. Mr. Schember had b~n accepted into the Texas A&M Graduate
School to study agronomy. During his tenUre as a gradt~ate student, he was employed as a
graduate assistant in the A~ronomy ~epartment, Which Was directed by Ide P~ Trotter.
2 Titles, Inc. Abstract of Title to the Re-Subdivision of a Part of College Park Addition to the City of College Statiom Brazos County, Texas for
Oakwood Realty Company." No. 102. 17 March 1947. p. 2~4.
3 Balliew, Deborah. p. 18-19.
4B
razos County Abstract Company, Inc. Complementary Abstract of Title to Lots Number Five and Six of Block Number Twelve in the plan
of College Park. South East of A&M Campus. in College Station. Brazos County, Texas for W.D. Fitch, Inc." No. 7054. t2 June 1950.
p. 10-12.
511 Ayrshire - Schember 7 of 30
After receiving his master's degree in the spring of 1941, Mr. Schember was called to Active
Duty in the Army Air Force to serve in World War lis Fortunately, recalling fond memories of
College Station ~nd Texas A&M, Mr. and Mrs. Schember were able to remm in 1946 fbllowing
his military service.5
Mr. Schember then began his long career as the Assistant Director of the Texas Agricultural
Experiment Station. TI~ Texas Agricultural Experiment Station was established in April 1887 to
conduct research into every phas~ of the state's crOp and livestock operations. As part of the
Texas A&M University syste~, the College Station c~tmpus served, and Continues to serve, as the
headquarters, with extensions established ~cross the stat~fi
It was after their return that Mr. and Mrs. Schember purchased the aforementioned lots in College
Park. They constructed their home on two of the fhree lots in 1950, and the remaimng lot has
been used for gardening and recreation, he Schembers rem'ed their two children, Susan and
Kurt, in their home on AYrshire Street and cOntinUe to remain residents in the College Park
Subdivision today.*
Architectural Significance
When construction resumed following World War II, houses designed in new modem styles
largely replaced those based on historical precedent. The RanCh Style, which developed in the
' ~ · lr'
1950 s and 1960 s and even remmns today, was one of the modem styles that was popu a ~zed.
These one-storY houses with low-pitched roofs and long, rambling facades were made possible
partly by our new reliance on automobiles. As aUtomobiles repla~ed streetcars and buses as the
primary mode of transportation following the war, compact houSes could be replaced by these
sprawling designs on l~ger, suburban tots.
Characteristics shared by these Ranch Style homes often include asymmetrical one-story masses
with low-pitched roofs The roofs, tYPic/tlly hipPed, cross, gabled, 6~ side-gabled, have moderate
or wide cave overhangs. Like the Schem~er h;me, both ~rick and woo~en cladding are used,
sometimes in combination. Large piCture windows in the living areas and ribbon windows
frequently are distinctive features, g~dditionally, private outdoor living areas are often created in
part~ally enclosed courtyards or pat~os~
The Schember home, designed by H.G. Ransom and built by Bill Fitch, is an excellent example
of this new style that became prevalent following the War. In fact, the design was progressive and
ahead of ~ts t~me ~n the College Statmn area and drew many curious onlookers and quest~o s.
The exterior of the home appears today much like it did at the time of its construction ~n 1950.
The asymmetrical shape c~t~l in redw?d siding and long Roman brick is capped with a low-
pitched roof built up v~ith cream colored graVel. Two extehor Walls of long, Roman brick extend
into the interior of the house to establis~ a relationship and dialogue between the interior and
exterior environments. In addition, the interior is accel~ted with ret] tile floors and six-foot high
brick walls, which facilitated natural ventilation Prior to air conditioning. The main living-dining
area once was divided by a l°w, brick planter and continues to lo~k into the neighborhood
Schember, Victor and Marion Schember. Personal Interview. 12 June 2003.
...... stin
The Handbook of Texas Online. _College of L~beral Arts and the General Libraries at the Un~lverslty of Texas at Au .
<http://www·tsha.utexas. edu/> (16June 2003).
Schember, Victor and Marion Schember. Personal Interview. 12 June 2003·
McAlester. Virginia and Lee. A Field Guide to American Houses, New York City, New York: Alfred A. IG~opf, Inc.. 1984. p. 477-479.
Schember, Victor and Marion Schember. Personal Intervie~v. 12 June 2003.
11 Ayrshire - Schember 8 of 30
through a series of windows extending the length of the room along Bell Street. Additional
elements that indicate the Ranch Style include the ribbon windows found in the study and the
play porch that once Was open to the rear year AlthoUgh some alterations have been made to the
house through the years, the character-d~ning features and sPaces remain intact. All of these
features, plu~ man~ more experienced inside the home, make the Schember home an extremely
livable space that l~as withst0~)d the test of time.
Drawings
See attached site plan, floor plans, and elevations.
Photographs
See attached photographs.
Additional Information
See attached newspaper article and map of College Park subdivision.
References
Balliew, Deborah. College Station, Texas: 1938-1988. College Station, Texas: Intaglio Press,
1987.
Brazos County Abstract Company, Inc. "Complementary Abstract of Title to Lots Number Five
and Six olJBlock Number Tv ive in the plan of Coll~ge Park, South East of A&M Campus,
in College Station, Braz°s County, Texa~ for W.D. Fi[~h, Inc." 'No. 7054. 12 June 1950.
Brazos County Abstract Company, Inc. "Complementary Abstract of Title to Lots Number Five
and Six of Block Twelve, College Park Ad~liti°n to the City of COllege Station, Brazos
County, Texas for V.E. Scheml~r." No. 7100. 1 July 195~.
' ' 'rris
The Handbook of Texas Onhne. College of L~beral Arts and the General L~b a e at the
University of Texas at Austin. <httP://wwW.tsha.utexas.edu/> (16 June 2003).
McAlester, Virgima and Lee. A FieldGuide to American Houses. New York City, New York:
Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1984.
Schember, Victor and Marion Schember. Personal Interview. 12 June 2003.
"Time Savers Used at Schember Home." BryanDaily News. 4 March 1951.
Titles, Inc. "Abstract of Title to the Re-SubdivisiOn of a Part of College Park Addition to the City
of College Station, Brazos County, Texas tbr OakWood Realty Company." No. 102.
17 March 1947.
511 Ayrshire - Schember 9 of 30
ALLEY
AYRSHtRE STREET
511 Ayrshire - Schember 10 of 30
Utility, Shop, and
Storage Enclosure
J
Historic PhOtographs
Examining the new land at the come~ ofBell ~d A~shire Stree~ in 1949;
C0nS~¢fing the hOuse Ln 1950: T~d~avel are add~ to the builtzup roOf.
511 Ayrshire Street - Schember
15 of 30
511 Ayrshire S~eet 2 Schember
16 of 30
Ice storm in January 1951.
511 Ayrshire Street - Schember
Ice storm in January 1951.
Current Photographs
Streetscape
southeast comer.
area and the remains c
511 Ayrshire Street - Schember
area.
18 of 30
511 Ayrshire Street - Schember
Northwest
carport,
511 Ayrshire Street - Schember
Ayrshire
once was the
eaves.
20 of 30
ofthe
Ranch
511 Ayrshire Street - Schember
waHs
of
The living
Ori
of the brick-
between
511 Ayrshire Street - Schember 22 of 30
The ribbor
511 Ayrshire Street - Schember
homes.
slanted drawers
511 AyrShire Street - Schember
24 of 30
511 Ayrshire Street - Schember
25 of 30
The early subdivisions of the J.E. Scott League are revealed in this map, taken from the Abstract of Title
compiled for the (Sakwood Realty Company in 1947.
511 Ayrshire Street - Schember 26 of 30
COLLEGE PARK
Addition Fo Cotte~e
Texas
This map, taken from the Abstract of Title compiled for the Oakwood Realty Company in 1947, illustrates the
layout of College Park Addition, the first of~~campus residential area in ~olleg~ Station. The Schember
property is found at the comer of Ayrshire and Hereford (now Bell) Streets.
511 Ayrshire Street - Schember 27 of 30
Usec]
Many a home in this country house and forms the small en-
cherishes fine z Crance hall where (~ne side of
AmeriCan i redwood has doable, coat Closet.
~n
most
well
and ' other
repeated on the exterior,
Redwood is used on one wall
of the room to match the low
beamed ceilir~g which ties the
modern design to the Early Am-
erican furnishings. Draperies
small floral design cotton are
Used on traverse rods to cover
the large Windows.
~he
the
tile
L. toy
with
red
world in which
in her
collec-
and
hobbies.
'Kurt