Generally bounded by Seventh to 14th Streets, Virginia Avenue and the alley north of McDowell Road.
Period of Significance: 1907-1942
On March 9, 1908, Dwight B. Heard, President of the Suburban Realty Company, petitioned for the subdivision of a quarter section of property bounded by 7th Street, McDowell Road, 12th Street and the canal, that at the time ran down Oak Street. This was the first subdivision of property in what would become known as the Coronado neighborhood. Between the years 1906 and 1908, thirty of those being in the Coronado District: Homewood Tract, Syndicate Place and Ranchito Bonitos. These three new subdivisions on the norther edge of Phoenix would, by 1935, comprise part of the largest residential section of the city.
The initial intent of the speculators was to build a prestigious “streetcar suburb” such as the Encanto-Palmcroft and Roosevelt Neighborhoods which were established during the same period. However, land values at the time were determined by a homesite’s proximity to Central Avenue. Coronado’s comparative distance to the east of Central Avenue and downtown resulted in more modest building restrictions than in other neighborhoods of the city. At that time, restrictions that regulated the minimum cost of houses built on a particular lot were the common means of determining the range of house size in a development. AS a result, the Coronado area evolved into a more modest working-class neighborhood than the original investors had envisioned.
The prosperity in Phoenix after World War I brought hundreds of the Valley’s new residents, mostly middle-class, white, and blue-collar workers, into the subdivisions in the Coronado area. In 1920 alone, more than 800 building permits were issued by the city of Phoenix, with contractors purchasing whole blocks and building several “spec” houses at a time. Building homes on speculation, without any financial commitment from a buyer, was a relatively progressive idea for its day. As residential construction in Central Phoenix boomed, Coronado emerged as a desirable and affordable area. The average price of a residence was $1973 in 1920. Lots were provided with city water and sewer connections, electricity and graveled streets.
Other facilities in and around the Coronado area influenced its growth. The Brill Street trolley car line was extended north of McDowell Road to 10th Street and Sheridan in 1914. A small commercial node developed at that corner; the New Deal Grocery (ca. 1934) still stands to reflect the commercial activity. Good Samaritan Hospital, originally called Deaconess Hospital, was built in 1917. The construction of Emerson School in 1921 and the location of Coronado Park encouraged young families to move into the area. Most residents were hard working, service industry workers. Working women were salesclerks or clerical office workers. Men’s occupations covered the spectrum of employment available in the early part of the century: firemen, policemen, bank tellers, railroad engineers and other types of service sector employees.
As in the rest of the community, the Great Depression significantly slowed development in Coronado. Many homeowners were forced to sell while others converted their backyard garages into living quarters and rented out the main house. Although done out of necessity, this practice turned out to be a very positive economic strategy. Many residents were able to move back into their homes and retain the converted living quarters as rental property. The first city zoning code enacted in 1930 reflected the widespread application of this practice and it is still evident in Coronado today.
As the economy began to turn itself around, Coronado became the site of the first planned, mass-produced subdivision in Phoenix. Andy Womack, who would become a prominent developer in Phoenix, built the Womack subdivision in 1939 in the area bordered by Monte Vista, 14th Street, Palm Lane and 13th Street. Womack took the idea of “spec” homes one step further, by building homes on the lots, constructing what would become a tract home development. With the success of the Womack Subdivision, the remaining tracts in the portions of the Coronado Neighborhood east of 12th Street were quickly subdivided by various developers.
The impact of the Depression significantly influenced the architecture of Coronado because it slowed the development. By the time construction resumed, architectural styles had shifted. Thus, there are two distinct areas within the Coronado district. The area between 7th and 12th Streets dates to the 1920’s, while the remainder of the district dates to the late 1930’s and 1940’s. Approximately 600 buildings in the district date between 1920 and 1930. The predominant style seen in the western portion of Coronado is Bungalow which is a one-story house with a simple, functional floor plan, also characterized by broadly pitched overhanging roof gables and broad front porches with stone or brick piers. Some Period Revival styles, most notable the Spanish Colonial Traditions, can also be found scattered throughout Coronado. In the eastern portion of the neighborhood, there are also numerous examples of the English Cottage and Tudor Revival styles. Garages are typically found in the rear of the lot and usually incorporate some architectural details of the main house.
The Coronado Neighborhood is both typical of the early suburbanization of Phoenix and reflective of trends that shaped the city’s neighborhoods as they developed between the two World Wars. A large portion of the Coronado district still retains much of the character of a modest streetcar suburb of the 1920’s and remains a viable middle-class neighborhood. Coronado’s architectural significance comes from its diverse collection of residential styles, predominantly Bungalow, Spanish Colonial Revival and Tudor Revival that dominated Phoenix neighborhoods from the 1910’s through the 1930’s.
Source: The City of Phoenix Historic Preservation Office
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