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A. S. Bradford House

California museum stubsColonial Revival architecture in CaliforniaHistoric house museums in CaliforniaHouses completed in 1902Houses in Orange County, California
Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in CaliforniaMuseums in Orange County, CaliforniaNational Register of Historic Places in Orange County, CaliforniaOrange County, California geography stubsPlacentia, CaliforniaSouthern California Registered Historic Place stubs
A. S. Bradford House
A. S. Bradford House

The A. S. Bradford House, also known as The Bradford House, is a historic home in Placentia, California. It was the home of Albert Sumner Bradford, who founded Placentia by arranging for establishment of a water tank along the railway. Homes and businesses within a one-mile radius could get water. Designed by James Stafford, the Colonial Revival, 15-room house was built in 1902, in an orange grove.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978, and operated as a house museum at one point. Albert Sumner Bradford (August 18, 1860—March 30, 1933), originally from Shapleigh, Maine, bought 20 acres land in 1890 in what would become his Tesoro Ranch Placentia. He did much to support growth of the citrus industry.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article A. S. Bradford House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

A. S. Bradford House
North Kraemer Boulevard,

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Latitude Longitude
N 33.888333333333 ° E -117.86361111111 °
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North Kraemer Boulevard

North Kraemer Boulevard
92870
California, United States
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A. S. Bradford House
A. S. Bradford House
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Fullerton Arboretum
Fullerton Arboretum

The Fullerton Arboretum is a 26-acre (11 ha) botanical garden with a collection of plants from around the world, located on the northeast corner of the California State University, Fullerton campus in Fullerton, California, in the United States. It is the largest botanical garden in Orange County, with a collection of over 4,000 plants. The Arboretum saves species that are extinct or near extinction and serves as a learning place for agricultural history.The Arboretum officially was created in 1976, and officially opened in 1979. The arboretum, which was originally a diseased orange grove, was transformed into organic gardening plots. A centerpiece of the Arboretum is the Heritage House, which was built in 1894 as the home and office of Fullerton's pioneer physician, Dr. George C. Clark. In 1972 the house was moved to what is now the middle of the Arboretum. The Arboretum's garden paths wander through four major collections: Cultivated, Woodlands, Mediterranean and Desert Collections. Highlights include Southern California native vegetation, Rare Fruit Grove, an 11,000 sq ft (1,000 m2) organic vegetable garden, historic Citrus and Avocados, Channel Islands Garden, an extensive Cycad Collection, Conifer Collection, Palm Grove, Community Gardens, and a Children's Garden. The Arboretum gives people the opportunity to teach and learn about the environment. They work with students and faculty from a variety of different campus departments and gather information. The research that is done is shared throughout Orange County.