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Rengstorff House

Coordinates:37°25′53.24″N122°5′13.56″W / 37.4314556°N 122.0871000°W /37.4314556; -122.0871000
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Historic house in California, United States

United States historic place
Henry A. Rengstorff House
The Rengstorff House
Rengstorff House is located in San Jose, California
Rengstorff House
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Rengstorff House is located in California
Rengstorff House
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Rengstorff House is located in the United States
Rengstorff House
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Location3070 N. Shoreline Blvd.
Mountain View, California
Coordinates37°25′53.24″N122°5′13.56″W / 37.4314556°N 122.0871000°W /37.4314556; -122.0871000
Area2 acres (0.81 ha)
Architectural styleItalianate[1]
NRHP reference No.78000778[1]
Added to NRHPJune 13, 1978

TheRengstorff House was one of the first houses to be built inMountain View, California. It was built c. 1867 by Henry Rengstorff, a prominent local businessman who operated a ferry betweenSan Francisco and Mountain View. It is built in theItalianateVictorian architecture style. The house's three-bay front facade features an entrance pavilion topped by abalustrade and a pediment on the middle bay.[2]

History

[edit]
Henry Rengstorff, c. 1888
Henry Rengstorff, c. 1888

Henry Rengstorff built the house near Rengstorff Landing, an importantgrain shipping point. The house was built to demonstrate his prosperity, and to raise his six children in comfort, including a room built solely for his four girls, to accommodate their regular appointment with a dressmaker to try on the latest fashions. When Rengstorff died in 1906, his daughter Elise Haag and grandsonPerry Askam moved into the house.[3] Descendants of Rengstorff would live in the house until 1959.[4]: 46  The ranch on which the house was located was purchased by the Newhall Development Company, which had no use for the house; a 1972 plan to move it was aborted.[3]

In 1976, Frederick Woods, and James and Richard Schoenfeld launched their plan to preserve the mansion and make it their private residence at the intersection of Middlefield Road and Independence Street, to realize a dream of living in a grand, fully restored and modernized Victorian mansion. Needing $60,000 (equivalent to $332,000 in 2024) to realize the plan, they hatched the plan later known as the infamousChowchilla kidnapping.[5] When all the children and their bus driver were able to escape, they were arrested and sentenced to life in prison, ending this plan for the house.[6]

After the house was placed on theNational Register of Historic Places in 1978, Mountain View mayor Richard Wilmuth wanted to restore it in place. Construction encroached and in January 1979 a company planning to construct an industrial park on the house's land suggested it be moved north toShoreline Park.[7] The land was purchased by the city in 1979 and the house was moved onto Shoreline Park land in January 1980. To make way for theMarine World/Africa USA theme park the house was moved again in 1986, further into Shoreline Park, to its current location.[4]: 139 [8][9] After a major renovation costing about $1,000,000 (equivalent to $2,309,000 in 2024), funded by the city, the house was opened to the public in April 1991.[4]: 139 [8] It has since been used as a museum and to host weddings and miscellaneous events; as of 2023[update] it is open to the public on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Saturdays or Online 24/7 via 3D tour.[10]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ab"National Register Information System".National Register of Historic Places.National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. ^Alsman, Ken; Sarnat, Marlene; Butler, Phyllis; Lyon, Emily; Carlson, John (December 28, 1976)."National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form: Henry A. Rengstorff House".National Park Service. RetrievedSeptember 1, 2014.Accompanied by photos.
  3. ^abButler, Phyllis Filiberti (1991).Old Santa Clara Valley: A Guide to Historic Buildings from Palo Alto to Gilroy. San Carlos, California: Wide World Publishing. pp. 38–39.ISBN 0-933174-81-0.
  4. ^abcIgnoffo, Mary Jo (2002).Milestones: a history of Mountain View, California. Cupertino, CA: California History Center & Foundation.ISBN 0-935089-28-4.
  5. ^Taaffe, Linda (December 14, 2023)."How Mountain View's oldest house became a motive for the 1976 Chowchilla kidnapping".Palo Alto Online. Archived fromthe original on December 16, 2023.
  6. ^Baugh, Jack W. (1978).Why have they taken our children?: Chowchilla, July 15, 1976. New York, New York: Delacorte Press.ISBN 0-440094-63-1.
  7. ^Hanner, Richard (March 7, 1979). "Old Rengstorff – a close call, but saved by impassioned plea".Valley Journal. p. 1.
  8. ^abWinks, Michael (June 20, 1984). "Mansion's reprieve as hostel".The San Francisco Examiner. pp. 1–2.
  9. ^Larsen, Elaine (April 28, 2000). "When 'R' Stands for Romance".The San Francisco Examiner. pp. P-1, P-5, P-6.
  10. ^"Museum Tours".City of Mountain View Docent-Led Tours. RetrievedApril 7, 2023.

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