Historic Landmark CommissionNov. 16, 2020

D.10 - 1117 Linden — original pdf

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HISTORIC LANDMARK COMMISSION NOVEMBER 16, 2020 DEMOLITION AND RELOCATION PERMITS HDP-2020-0419 1117 LINDEN STREET D.10 - 1 PROPOSAL Demolish a ca. 1940 house. ARCHITECTURE One-story, roughly rectangular-plan stone-veneered frame house with Tudor Revival stylistic influences, including the “cat-slide” roof; partial-width inset porch; brick surrounds for all windows and the attic vent; variety of fenestration patterns. RESEARCH The house was built around 1940 by Marvin W. Pehl Sr. and his wife, Nobie, who lived here until around 1943. Marion W. Pehl was listed as a clerk at the Gugenheim-Goldsmith Company in the city directories, and a shipping clerk at a wholesale produce company, according to the 1940 U.S. Census. They had lived at 1802 Riverview Street prior to building this house. Marvin William Pehl Sr. died 1990; Nobie Pehl died in 1995. They are buried in Tyler, Texas. After a short period of tenancy by a renter in the mid-1940s, the house was purchased by Roy H. and Lillie Mae Gartman, who lived here until around 1954. Roy Gartman was a carpenter for Brown and Root, general building contractors; from this house, they moved to 1901 Bluebonnet Lane in South Austin. From 1954 through the end of the 1950s, the house was rented, then purchased by Charles F. and June E. Beadle. Charles F. Beadle was a native of Arkansas, who served in the U.S. Army during World War II, and was a city firefighter while living here. STAFF COMMENTS The house is beyond the bounds of any City survey to date. The applicant has information from the previous owner of the house that the stone and brick work that makes this house so distinctive was applied in a ca. 1979 remodel of the house, not within the historic period. Staff has evaluated this house for designation as a historic landmark and has determined that the house may meet the criteria for landmark designation as set forth in City Code: a. Architecture. The house is a minimal traditional house with aspects of Tudor Revival design and ornamental brick surrounds for the windows and attic vent, indicating a high degree of artistry in construction and architectural significance. However, it has been determined that the stone and brick work were not part of the original, historic architecture or character of the house. b. Historical association. The house was the home of several middle-class families over time, including a shipping clerk for a wholesale produce and beer distributor, a carpenter, and a city firefighter. The historical significance of the individual residents likely does not rise to the level of satisfying this criterion, but the house reflects a more general significance of the lower middle class typical in this neighborhood. c. Archaeology. The house was not evaluated for its potential to yield significant data concerning the human history or prehistory of the region. d. Community value. The house does not possess a unique location, physical characteristic, or significant feature that contributes to the character, image, or cultural identity of the city, the neighborhood, or a particular demographic group. e. Landscape feature. The property is not a significant natural or designed landscape with artistic, aesthetic, cultural, or historical value to the city. D.10 - 2 STAFF RECOMMENDATION Staff has met with the applicant on-site and discussed the possibility of preservation of the house or a portion of it, and reviewed the structure much more closely with regard to the statements that the stone and brickwork on this house were not applied during the historic period. The applicant proposes to construct a new duplex on this site, and may consider using some of the existing stone veneer and brick surrounds at the front door to the duplex or at another location facing the street to commemorate the existing house in the new construction. Staff recommends release of the permit upon completion of a City of Austin Documentation Package, consisting of photographs of all elevations, a dimensioned sketch plan, and a narrative history, for archiving at the Austin History Center. LOCATION MAP D.10 - 3 D.10 - 4 1117 Linden Street ca. 1940 D.10 - 5 OCCUPANCY HISTORY 1117 Linden Street City Directory Research, Austin History Center By City Historic Preservation Office October, 2020 1959 Charles F. Beadle, owner No occupation listed Charles F. and June Beadle, renters City firefighter 1957 1955 1952 1949 1947 1944-45 1941 1939 Charles F. and Jane E. Beadle, renters City firefighter NOTE: Roy H. and Lillie M. Gartman are listed at 1901 Bluebonnet Lane. He was a carpenter supervisor for Brown and Root, Inc., building contractors, 608 Nalle Building [Ewell Nalle Building], 610 Brazos Street. Roy H. and Lillie M. Gartman, owners Carpenter NOTE: Charles F. and Jane E. Beadle are not listed in the directory. Roy H. and Lillie M. Gartman, owners Carpenter Roy H. and Lillie M. Gartman, owners No occupation listed Lonnie F. and Vonna B. Kanetzky, renters Assistant parts manager, Capitol Chevrolet, 220-24 E. 5th Street. NOTE: Roy H. and Lillie M. Gartman are not listed in the directory. Marion W. and Novie Pehl, owners Clerk, Gugenheim-Goldsmith Company, wholesale fruit and produce, wholesale beer distributors, 410 E. 3rd Street. The address is not listed in the directory. NOTE: Marvin W. and Nobie Pehl are listed at 1802 Riverview Street; he was a driver for Gugenheim-Goldsmith Company, wholesale liquors and produce, 410 E. 3rd Street. BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES: Marvin W. and Nobie Pehl (ca. 1940 – ca. 1943) Marvin Pehl married Nobie Basey in Travis County in December, 1932. The 1940 U.S. Census (April 15, 1940) shows Marvin and Nobie Pehl as the renters of a house at 3509 Wabash Avenue in Austin. Marvin Pehl was 24, had been born in Texas, and was a shipping clerk for a wholesale produce company. Nobie Pehl was 25, had been born in Texas, and had no occupation listed. They had a son, Marvin, Jr., 1, who had been born in Texas. His October, 1940 World War II draft registration card shows that Marvin William Pehl was living at this address. He was born in 1911 in Austin, and was employed by Harold W. Hoefgen, the general manager of Gugenheim-Goldsmith, a wholesale produce and beer distributor. His wife D.10 - 6 was Novie Basey Pehl. Marvin Pehl was 5’-9” tall, weighed 160 pounds, and had a light complexion with brown hair and blue eyes. He had a slight limp in his right leg. Marvin Pehl died in 1990; Nobie B. Pehl died in 1995. They are buried in Tyler, Texas. Roy H. and Lillie Gartman (ca. 1946 – ca. 1954) His 1940 World War II draft registration card shows that Roy Hester Gartman was living at 2209 E. 2½ Street in Austin. He was born in Bell County, Texas in 1910 and was married to Lillie Mae Gartman. He worked for Brown and Root, building contractors, with offices in the Brown Building. He was 6 feet tall, weighed 220 pounds and had a ruddy complexion with brown hair and hazel eyes. He had a scar over his right eye. The 1940 U.S. Census shows Roy and Lillie Mae Gartman as the owners of the house at 2209 E. 2 ½ Street in Austin; that house was worth $1,000. Roy Gartman was 28, had been born in Texas, and was a carpenter in building construction. Lillie Mae Gartman was 23, had been born in Texas, and had no occupation listed. They had a daughter, Madine, 3, who had been born in Texas. Roy Hester Gartman, Sr. was born in Youngsport, Bell County, Texas in 1910, and died in Llano, Texas in 1997. Lillie Mae Gartman was born in Lytton Springs, Texas in 1917, and died in Llano in 2003. They are buried in Killeen, Texas. Charles F. and June Beadle (ca. 1954 - ) Charles F. Beadle is listed in the 1940 U.S. Census at a military reservation in Bellevue, Nebraska. He was 20 years old, had been born in Arkansas, and was a soldier in the U.S. Army. Charles F. Beadle married June Eleanor Gamble in Travis County in August, 1946. Charles F. Beadle was born in 1920 and died in 1997. He is buried in Little Rock, Arkansas. Water service permit to Marvin W. Pehl for this house (1940) D.10 - 7 Building permit for the construction of a garage (1974)