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Josiah Merritt Adobe

1852 establishments in CaliforniaBuildings and structures in Monterey, CaliforniaHouses completed in 1852Houses in Monterey County, CaliforniaHouses on the National Register of Historic Places in California
Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Monterey County, CaliforniaMonterey Bay Area Registered Historic Place stubsMonterey County, California geography stubsNational Register of Historic Places in Monterey County, CaliforniaNeoclassical architecture in California
Merritt House (Monterey, CA)
Merritt House (Monterey, CA)

The Josiah Merritt Adobe, located at 386 Pacific St. in Monterey, California and also known as Merritt House, is a historic house that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It was built in 1830 and is architecturally significant as perhaps the only example of Greek Revival temple form architecture applied to an adobe building in Mexican California. The Benicia State Capitol Building (California State Landmark #153) included the Greek temple format but is made of stone or masonry. The building was documented by the Historic American Buildings Survey in 1936.It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977. In 1979 the house was developed into a small hotel.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Josiah Merritt Adobe (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Josiah Merritt Adobe
Pacific Street, Monterey New Monterey

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 36.600555555556 ° E -121.89583333333 °
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Address

Merritt House Inn

Pacific Street
93944 Monterey, New Monterey
California, United States
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Merritt House (Monterey, CA)
Merritt House (Monterey, CA)
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Monterey State Historic Park
Monterey State Historic Park

Monterey State Historic Park is a historic state park in Monterey, California. It includes part or all of the Monterey Old Town Historic District, a historic district that includes 17 contributing buildings and was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1970. The grounds include California's first theatre, and the Monterey Custom House, where the American flag was first raised over California. The park is a group of restored historic buildings: the Custom House, the Larkin House, California's First Brick House, Colton Hall (City Hall of Monterey), Old Whaling Company, the Stevenson House, the First Theater, the Pacific House Museum, the Interpretive House, Casa del Oro, and Casa Soberanes. These houses display the cultural diversity that guided California's transition from a remote Spanish outpost in Las Californias province, to an agricultural Mexican Alta California territory, to U.S. statehood. These influential adobe houses made up California's earliest capital and were the site of the state's first constitutional convention. Today the historic buildings retain their rich heritage, preserving an important part of Californian as well as Spanish, Mexican, and American history. Added to the adobe houses is the park's Interpretive Center and the Pacific House Museum. The park provides tours of the historic houses and museums for the general public. The 'Secret Gardens of Old Monterey' are part of the open-air museum for visitors. The Monterey State Historic Park Association (MSHPA) is the non-profit association that works to support the park.