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Date: | Wed, 29 Nov 2006 12:40:43 -0500 |
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While researching the architectural heritage of Frank O. Wells in San Diego,
CA, recently, I encountered a man with a box of Wells' plans for a half
dozen houses. He agreed to donate them to a local repository for public benefit,
as long as I got him copies. The rub is that they are 80-years old, rolled up,
acidic, and in some places crumbling. I took them to the repository, but
they want the plans flat and encapsulated. Does anyone on this list have
experience with flattening old architectural plans (or archaeology field maps)? I
sure would hate to spend thousands of dollars here.
Wells designed a broad range of house styles between 1923 and 1930. After
being raised in the Arizona mining and saloon industry, he worked in the
Hollywood silent film industry before studying architecture in Europe. He arrived
in San Diego and began drawing plans for Spanish Eclectic and Pueblo style
houses (some survive), as well as English and Colonial. After his death at age
94, his widow went into conservatorship and the antique dealers dumped all his
life work (except the cache of plans we recently found). I feel it would be
a great pity to be unable to save them for posterity.
Ron May
Legacy 106, Inc.
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