A Victorian Christmas and Ghostly Tales: Exploring the Davis-Horton House in SD

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 “William Heath Davis House, 1850. The Davis House is the oldest surviving structure from San Diego’s New Town. It is an example of a prefabricated, “salt-box” style home. Built on the East Coast, shipped around Cape Horn, and assembled in San Diego, the Davis House originally stood on Sate and Market, but was moved to 11th Avenue, then finally to its present site in 1984. Along with being a residence, it also has served as a county hospital.” Elisa.rolle, CC BY-SA 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/36/William_Heath_Davis_House_0595.jpg

If you’re ready for a journey into history, a touch of ghostly intrigue, and a glimpse of old-fashioned holiday cheer, the Davis-Horton House in San Diego’s Gaslamp Quarter has it all. This unassuming yet elegant structure at the Gas Lamp Museum is a remarkable testament to the city’s storied past.

A House with a Storied History

Built in 1850, the Davis-Horton House is reported to be the oldest surviving structure in downtown San Diego. Its original name, the William Heath Davis House, reflects its early significance in “New Town,” an ambitious settlement that became modern San Diego. With scarce local materials available at the time, the house was shipped from Portland, ME, as a prefabricated structure. Its saltbox-style architecture, characterized by a sloping roof and two-story front, is a rare feature in California.

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October 1960 NORTHWEST CORNER ELEVATION – William Heath Davis House, 227 Eleventh Avenue, San Diego, San Diego County, CA HABS CAL,37-SANDI,2-2. Boucher, Jack E., Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons via https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ef/October_1960_NORTHWEST_CORNER_ELEVATION_-_William_Heath_Davis_House%2C_227_Eleventh_Avenue%2C_San_Diego%2C_San_Diego_County%2C_CA_HABS_CAL%2C37-SANDI%2C2-2.tif

The house was initially located near Market and State streets, later serving as a county hospital managed by Anna Scheper in 1873, where she earned $1 per patient daily. In the 1930s, George Deyo acquired the house, and by 1977, the Lanuza family donated it to San Diego. After a restoration project, the house became a museum in 1984, preserving its historical significance for future generations…

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