10th Annual Historic Home Tour and So Much More

One of the new homes on the 2010 Home Tour

10th Annual Historic Home Tour --
A Decade of Homes and so much more
Saturday, January 23, 2010
10am to 4pm

Thank you to the homeowners, volunteers, and sponsors for another wonderful historic home tour!

Come see some old favorites and visit some previously unseen historic homes in Mesa’s historic districts. *rain or shine*

In addition to a wide array of houses in three of Mesa's Historic Districts, the home tour will include the chance to see the Mesa Historical Museum, consisting of two National Register historic buildings, as well as exhibits ranging from Mesa history, to Spring Training (baseball) in Arizona, to the history of the Wallace and Ladmo Show.

Stops include:

  • Telford House: Built around 1939, a Tudor with a steeply pitched roof, recessed entry porch and arched opening.
  • Kuck House: A ranch house built in 1949 for Lester and Alma Kuck. New on tour this year.
  • Lenhart House: Built about 1954, a Transitional Ranch with references to Prairie Modernism. A unique feature of the home is a large corner wood-burning stone fireplace with a built-in oil painting done on glass with back lighting hanging over the mantel. The artist, Hannah Webb, was the grandmother of the current resident, Sue Richards. (Last seen in 2001.
  • Ruse/Mougeot/Gurtler House: A Bungalow built around 1907. Although the home has been on the tour in the past, it has new owners and has been completely redecorated.
  • Inside the Bungalow, new on tour.
  • Goodman House: A Craftsman Bungalow built in 1920. The Goodmans were the owners of Apache Drug on Main Street. Clara Goodman was the first female licensed pharmacist in Arizona. Owned today by the Goodman’s granddaughter and her husband, Joe and Frankie Troutman, the kitchen is a must to see.
  • Lawrence J Trimble House: A Tudor blend with a gabled and recessed entryway. Mr. Trimble, district manager of the Arizona Republic and his wife, Irene built the home in 1948. The foundation was laid with the help of local Boy Scouts. Last seen in 2002.
  • Paddock/Jones/Johnson House: An adobe/stucco Bungalow built in 1920 by Clarence Paddock and may have been a rental property in its earliest days. The home has new residents and has been redecorated completely.

Tickets ($15) are on sale now *only* in person at the Mesa Historical Museum. Tickets will also be available the day of the tour at the Museum, and at the three ticket locations in the historic districts (see the map).

All proceeds will benefit the Mesa Historical Museum.

To see some beautiful photos taken at the 2009 tour, visit Maria Nissen's photography page.

Home Tour 2009 Home Tour 2009 Home Tour 2009 Home Tour 2009 Home Tour 2009


Questions?

Is this a guided tour?
While there are docents and booklets to give you plenty of information about the stops on the tour, the tour is not guided. You go at your own pace.

Are there buses?
There aren't buses, but the majority of the tour is walkable. Check out the map to see for yourself.

Some of the press from this year's tour, Mesa home tour features careful bungalow restoration

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