Park Book "Through These Doors DISCOVERING OAKLAND AT PRESERVATION PARK" |
|
San Francisco Chronicle Book Review
BOOKS IN BRIEF by Particia Holt April 28- May 4, 1996 |
|
Through These Doors Discovering Oakland at Preservation Park By Helaine Kaplan Prentice Just off Highway 980 at Martin Luther King Jr. Way and 12th Street in Oakland, pedestrians cannot believe their eyes: Laid out before them is the glorious Preservation Park, once a "collection of sadly neglected buildings," as project manager Susanne Hirshen-Monson writes in the foreword to this beautifully produced tour guide and elegantly illustrated mini-history. Recalling that "Oakland in the late 19th century was thriving waterfront city, the second largest in the state," author Prentice explains how grand and magnificent houses of the period, some facing demolition during freeway construction, some going to seed in formerly posh neighborhoods, were moved into the park next to "five fine historic buildings" to show seven distinct architectural styles dating from 1870 to 1911. Walk into the park toward the lovely Latham-Ducel Fountain (1873) - maps of all perspectives are provided - and you are immersed in Oakland's varied architectural heritage: Here is the Remillard House (1887), an example of the then "new" Queen Anne style with cylindrical turret and bell-shaped roof, triangular gable ends and beveled bay windows, or the Italianate Higgins House (1886), built by a San Francisco lumber merchant, with its intricate trim, jigsawed panels, Corinthian colonnettes and wide cove rustic siding. The book could have been a competent but drab listing of homes and histories but instead bursts with historical photographs, beautifully reproduced in duotone, showing Oakland's lifestyle of the time, from commuting by ferry to getting a haircut at a downtown barber shop, waiting for Chinese immigrants on the Oakland Long Wharf or hanging out at the Southern Pacific Passenger Depot. It's a collector's item for native and tourist alike. |
|