Chapter 12: "Aunt Hill". Homes of Architectural Distinction
The Barber Tract has always been known for its architecturally distinctive
homes. Three homes, designed by noted architects, exist today on Lots
11 and 11A of Mrs. Barber’s Lands. Peter Deetken, a longtime resident of
Lot 11A and the grandson of one of the early owners, grew up referring to
this hillside above Prospect Avenue as the “Aunt Hill”. His reason will be
clear as the story unfolds.
Lot 11 was deeded by Elizabeth Barber to Florence Inglasbe Tufts on April
17, 1905. Florence was the wife of John Burnside Tufts, a San Francisco
dentist. She was born in Merced County in 1874 and became one of the first
school teachers in San Anselmo, resigning after her marriage to John in 1898
in San Anselmo.
The Tufts home was designed by Bernard Maybeck and was built by his
brother-in-law Mark White in 1905-1906. The Tufts lived in the home only
briefly and sold it in 1910 to Charles Ross Laurence and his wife Faith who
had come from England in 1907.
The Tufts moved to San Rafael to their second Maybeck home on Culloden. In
1931 they commissioned their third Maybeck home on Buena Vista in the
Berkeley hills. Both of the Tufts were also artists, she a prize-winning
water colorist.
The Tufts House (14 Entrata) is listed in HERE TODAY: San Francisco's
Architectural Heritage which describes it as “the best of Maybeck’s
Marin efforts. Both reflective of and complementary to its environment, the
home is a masterwork of integral planning and construction." For more
information on the Tufts House, see the following:
Description
Exterior view, roof
Exterior view, window & roof
Interior view, built-in seat
Interior view, living room & ceiling
Interior view, wall & built-in seat
Interior view, fireplace
Interior view, wall & truss detail
On September 8, 1904 Elizabeth J. Barber deeded Lot 11A to Margaret A. Mee.
Margaret, the widow of James Mee, a San Francisco attorney, in turn deeded
the lot to Mary B. Curtis in September 1906. Mary Belle (Henry) Curtis (born
July 1875 in Illinois) was the wife of George Parker Curtis (born July 26,
1865 in Rutland Vermont). The Curtises married in 1899, moved to Los
Angeles and then came to Alameda. George worked for Dunham, Carrigan &
Hayden, a San Francisco wholesale hardware business, and continued to work
for the firm until his death on January 21, 1933.
In 1906 Harris Osborn, a San Anselmo architect, designed the house at 9
Prospect on a portion of Lot 11A for the Curtises.
It was highlighted by a seven gabled roof and sat on a hilly half acre site.
A small deck was added as well as a kitchen addition. Today the home has
been remodeled, painted, and is mostly obscured by the two homes on the lower
lots.
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Curtis House at 9 Prospect |
After George’s death, Mary sold the home to Frederick H. Meyer, a well-known
San Francisco architect. Mary died in 1967 in San Diego.
Originally the property had beautiful formal gardens which extended to
Prospect and around the corner to the intersection of Barber and Entrata.
Frederick Meyer, his daughter Phyllis and her husband Cedric Clute lived
here for many years. With the help of his father-in-law, Cedric designed the
gardens in the shape of a figure eight. The perimeter was hedged in boxwood
with rose gardens in the open areas. The walkways leading to the house were
lined with fruit trees. In 1955 the property was subdivided and two homes
were built on the lower lots. Part of the formal gardens went with the
original house which was subsequently owned by William and Jane Davis.
George Frederick (Fred) Newell and his wife Grace Patterson Newell also
lived in Alameda and were friends of the Curtises. Like George Curtis, Fred
Newell was employed by Dunham, Carrigan & Hayden. The Newells built a home on a portion of the
Curtis's lot at 15 Prospect.
Fred Newell was born in 1862 in Nevada County, California, the son of a
retail grocer, and came by 1890 to the San Francisco Bay Area. He married
Grace Patterson about 1899. After working for Dunham, Carrigan & Hayden for
a few years, he co-founded the Marshall-Newell Supply Company.
The house was designed by Julia Morgan. The barn, which still stands at the
front of the property, was built first and the Newells lived there until the
house was completed in 1908. It is listed in HERE TODAY with the following
description: “The low pitched roof line belies the two stories it mantles;
wood siding and textured brick steps leading to the front entrance give a
rustic air, yet maintain the home’s functional simplicity.”

Newell House at 15 Prospect See the following for
Julia Morgan's plans for the house:
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Newell House Under Construction. Fred & Grace Newell
standing. |
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The Newells also purchased the southern portion of Lot 12A in 1913 from
Katherine Walsh. An orchard was planted on a portion of the lot and a tennis
court was built on the rest.
Fred and Grace Newell lived in the house until their deaths in 1948 and
1953, respectively. Their adopted daughter Doris Atthowe and her husband
Allan Chambliss and family moved to San Anselmo in 1946 and lived in a house
built on the hill above the tennis court. They then lived in the Newell
House for many years. Doris was the youngest of three daughters of Reginald
and Eva Atthowe. Eva Atthowe died in 1917 and five year old Doris was adopted
by the Newells who were close friends of her parents. See
Chapter 10.
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Fred Newell in Julia Morgan House |
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Two of Grace’s sisters, Josephine and Nellie Eudora, were soon to join her
on this hillside in Barber Tract. The three sisters were the daughters of
Martin Francis Patterson and Ellen Jane Lancaster, both of Belfast, Maine.
Martin was a ships’ captain for the China Merchants' Steam Navigation Company and
visited many distant ports of call. Four of the five Patterson children,
including Grace, Josephine, Nellie and Kate (who was to live in Ross), were
born in Shanghai, China and spent their childhood there, arriving in the
U.S. in 1882.
Josephine Patterson and her husband William McLene Latham purchased the
Tufts House at 14 Entrata Avenue (Lot 11) from C. Ross Laurence in 1914 for
$11,000. Faith Laurence died in 1913 which likely led
to the sale of the lovely Maybeck home to the Lathams.
Josephine Patterson was born February 22, 1873 in Shanghai. She married William
Latham in 1901 in New Jersey and they came to the San Francisco Bay Area around
1910, after William retired from business. William Latham was interested in
municipal and public affairs and served as a San Anselmo Town Trustee from
1917 to 1918.
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William Latham on
porch at 14 Entrata |
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In 1920 two smaller houses were built on the property. The 1920 census lists
William M. Latham at 14 Entrata, a clerk for a water company, wife
Josephine, a maid, Mary Hughes, with her five children, and Eleanor Sampson,
Josephine’s niece. The Lathams had no children though William had two sons
from a previous marriage. They lived in the house until William’s death in
1926. Josephine sold the main house to Vincent and Josephine Fox and, in the
1930 census, Josephine Latham is listed at 12 Entrata, one of the small
houses which had been built on the property.
Nellie Eudora (Dodie) Patterson married Frederick W. Van Meter in 1902. They
moved from Alameda to San Anselmo in 1915 to join the other two Patterson
sisters. Their house at 16 Entrata (19 Avenue Del Norte is the current
address) was designed by W. Garden Mitchell, the Scottish-born San Anselmo
architect who designed Town Hall and the San Anselmo Public Library. The builder was E. I. Wilson. It is a one
story bungalow, redwood with clapboard siding. The interior is rustic
redwood board and batten with a large red brick fireplace. A small addition
to the rear of the house was made shortly after construction. A porch has
been enclosed.

Van Meter / Deetken House 1977
Fred Van Meter was born in New
York in 1879. He was the grandson of Rev. W. C. Van Meter, a well-known Baptist
minister associated with the Five Points Mission
(shown in the
film Gangs of New York)
and the Home for Little Wanderers in the bowery in New York City ,
founder of a Baptist mission in Rome, and translator of the Book of John into
Italian. Fred's father, Frank Langdon Van Meter, was a bookkeeper. He
brought his family from New Jersey to Alameda in the late 1880's.
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Dorothy, Dodie, Frank
Van Meter ca. 1924 |
Fred, a comptroller for
a mining operation in Idaho, and Dodie Van Meter had two children: Dorothy, born 1904, and George, born 1910.
Dorothy married Frederic Deetken and during the Depression the couple moved in and lived
with Dodie. The Deetken children grew up in their grandmother's home with their
great-aunts nearby on the "Aunt Hill." The homes were connected by
lighted pathways with two-way switches so the families could easily visit one
another.

1924 Sanborn Map showing the proximity
of the Curtis, Newell, Latham, Van Meter homes.
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