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Pardee House

Photo(s) by

pardeehome.org

Pardee House

Location

672 11th St.

Oakland, CA

Architectural Style

Italianate

Year Built

1869

Property Description

The Pardee Home, including its carriage house and water tower, is an Italianate-style home in Oakland’s Preservation Park Historic District. Once threatened by the construction of Interstate 980, the successful effort to save the house in the 1970s was an important early chapter in the historic preservation movement in Oakland. Pardee house was designated a city landmark in 1975, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976, and named a California state landmark in 1997.

The house was built in 1869 by Enoch Pardee, a Gold Rush immigrant to California from the Midwest, who became an eye doctor in San Francisco after mining gold. He also pursued a vigorous public career in the East Bay during the 1870s and 1880s, including mayor of Oakland, state assemblyman, and state senator. Enoch’s only child, by his first wife Mary, George C. Pardee, followed in his father’s footsteps, becoming an eye doctor in San Francisco and mayor of Oakland. Unlike his father, George did not serve in the state legislature in Sacramento; however, he was elected governor of California in 1902.

George’s wife, Helen, was one of California's most prodigious private collectors. In 1897, when George and Helen moved their young family into this house after Enoch’s death, Mrs. Pardee began creating a private house museum, with exhibits of her scores of collections eventually dominating most of the public rooms. Mrs. Pardee’s artifacts from the nations of the Pacific Rim, along with the museum’s notable collection of California fine arts, set this house apart from similar homes in other regions of the country. Helen was a renowned hostess and loved to give house tours with an emphasis on her collections, often followed by a cup of tea.

Governor and Mrs. Pardee lost two of their four daughters at early ages, but the two surviving daughters, Madeline and Helen, lived in this house as single women for many years after their parents’ deaths in the 1940s. The Pardee Home Foundation was established following Helen’s death in 1981 with the goal of preserving their lovely home and its contents as a public museum. The house is shown today just as it evolved over the years, and as such represents a unique historic site, illustrating over a century of the Pardees’ lives.

Adapted from

pardeehome.org

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