lafayette Historical Society

Lafayette: A Pictorial History

HISTORIC HOUSES...

Lafayette's first homes were primarily plain, unpretentious structures built by farmers who were more interested in shelter than in design and appearance. Few of these early homes remain today, but a number of photos of some of these structures have been discovered. By the late 1800's the fancy gewgaws, curlicues and complicated designs of the Victorian period began to replace the simple designs.

Elam Brown's house

Elam Brown's permanent home, built after he'd lived in three locations in the Happy Valley area, was this frame house. Located at what is now 985 Hough Avenue on Lafayette Creek, it was erected possibly as early as 1849. After "Squire" Brown's death in 1889 the home was occupied by Henry Toler Brown (adopted son of Elam's son Warren) and his family. The structure was torn down in the late 1920's.

Nathaniel Jones house

Nathaniel Jones and
his wife Elizabeth
built this house in the
1850's on their Locust
Farm property approximately
a mile up Happy Valley Road.
Carpentier house
One of the loveliest homes in the Lafayette area was this two story estate built by Horace Carpentier about 1865. Just one of the promoter's extensive holdings throughout California and the United States, the house was located near present Merriewood School. From 1886 to 1925 ranch foreman Arthur J. Burton and his family lived here, and the land was known as the Burton ranch.

 

Hodges house
When Samuel Hodges arrived in California he settled in the eastern portion of Lafayette on acreage at Reliez Creek and Old Tunnel Road. Here he raised his family and built this home on Reliez Station Road on the east side of the present freeway interchange.
Thomson house
Blacksmith Peter Thomson
built this home about 1870
back of his shop on the
northeast corner of Mt. Diablo
Boulevard and Moraga Road.
After his death, Thomson's son
William took over the shop and
also lived in the house. The
building was razed in 1948.
Postmaster Carrie Hough Van Meter's home was located near the northwest corner of Mt. Diablo Boulevard and Moraga Road. The post office building was in the front and just to the east of the house.
Van Meter house
Bickerstaff house
Mt. Diablo Boulevard was a dirt path when James Bickerstaff built this home in 1874 just west of Dewing Avenue. His daughter, Jennie Bickerstaff Rosenberg, had lived in the house for 85 years when it was torn down in 1964 to build a supermarket. The redwood tree to the left, planted as a seedling by Mrs. Rosenberg, still grows in the market parking lot.
Miss Katie Comstock, the village dress-maker, and her sister Georgia Bronson, who carried the local mail, owned this house which was the first structure on St. Mary's Road. Built in 1886 the original home, which forms the center part of the house, has been enlarged over the years.
Comstock house
Victorian house
This Victorian house, shown here in 1945, when it was located on what is now Deer Hill Road, back of the Plaza Shopping Center. Built circa 1899, it was surrounded by 63 acres of pear orchards. In 1954 the home was torn down.
Friendship Farm
This lovely Georgian-style home, known as Friendship Farm, was built in 1912 by Sally B. Hampton and Mary Dyer. A replica of Miss Dyer's eastern house, the structure is now a private residence at the end of Woodland Way.

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Table of Contents

Preface
Indian Country
Mexican Ranchos
American Speculators
Yankee Settlers
Early Days
The Farmers
Village Life
From Wagon Roads to City Highways
School Days
House of Worship
The Leisure Life
Historic Houses
The Changing Pace
The Town
The City
References