Peralta Home

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Peralta Home
PeraltaHome SanLeandroCA 1860.jpg
Peralta Home at time of construction, 1860
Location561 Lafayette Ave., San Leandro, California
Coordinates37°43′50.64″N 122°9′41.4″W / 37.7307333°N 122.161500°W / 37.7307333; -122.161500Coordinates: 37°43′50.64″N 122°9′41.4″W / 37.7307333°N 122.161500°W / 37.7307333; -122.161500
Built1860
ArchitectW.P. Toler
Architectural styleSpanish Colonial
NRHP reference No.78000654 [1]
CHISL No.285[2]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPNovember 22, 1978
Designated CHISL1938[2]

The Peralta Home, at 561 Lafayette Avenue in San Leandro was the first brick house built in Alameda County. It was constructed in the Spanish Colonial style in 1860 for Ignacio Peralta, early San Leandro Spanish settler, by W.P. Toler (Peralta's son-in-law).

A.C. Peachey purchased the house from Rafaela Sanchez Peralta (Igancio's widow) on May 18, 1875. Immediately thereafter Peachey added a large wood extension at the back of the brick house. Technically a 2+12-story building, the old Peralta house had its main reception rooms on the second story. Peachey continued this emphasis on the second story in his additions, treating the ground floor as a basement.

Interior of the Peralta Home, 1960

The house remained in the Peachey family for thirty-four years. Between 1909 and 1926, it went to Daniel and C.L. Best. Eventually in November 1926, it was purchased by the Alta Mira Club, who are still the current owners. One of the more interesting of 19th-century houses in San Leandro, it has additional historic associations with the large and land-rich Peralta family, who were pioneers of the area. Peralta's father, Luís María Peralta, received the Rancho San Antonio land grant from Spanish Governor Don Pablo Vicente de Solá on October 20, 1820.

The house is a California Historical Landmark[2] and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NPS-78000654).

References[]

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 15, 2006.
  2. ^ a b c "Peralta Home". Office of Historic Preservation, California State Parks. Retrieved 2012-10-06.

External links[]

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Park Service.

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