Frank A. Forster House | |
San Juan Capistrano Historic And Cultural Landmark
| |
Nearest city | San Juan Capistrano, California |
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Coordinates | 33°30′09″N 117°39′19″W / 33.5025°N 117.655278°W |
Area | 6,000 square feet (560 m2) |
Architect | Robert Farquhar Train Robert Edmund Williams |
Architectural style | Mission Revival |
NRHP reference No. | 86002405 |
Added to NRHP | September 11, 1986[1] |
The Frank A. Forster House in San Juan Capistrano, California is a 6,000-square-foot (560 m2) stucco, Spanish tile roofed mansion built in 1910 for $10,000 by Frank Ambrosio Foster, grandson of rancher John (Don Juan) Forster. It is the only remaining home of its style and era in the area.[2] It was designed as a 5-bedroom, 1-bathroom home in the Mission Revival style by Los Angeles architects Robert Farquhar Train and Robert Edmund Williams (Train & Williams). Upon the deaths of Frank and his wife Ada, their daughter Alice Forster Leck inherited the house, and bequeathed it to her nephew Pancho Forster.[3]
The property changed owners in 1975, and was purchased as a fixer-upper in 1983 by interior designer Martha Gresham, who traded two Porterville ranches for the house. It came with a legend of a ghost, nicknamed "George the Ghost" by Gresham. She spent $350,000 restoring the mansion,[4] and used it as a home and office until 1990 when she sold it to photographer Phillip Stewart Charis.[3]
The mansion is a San Juan Capistrano Historic and Cultural Landmark.[5] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places listings in Orange County, California in 1986.[6]