
By Mission Hills Heritage
The Mission Hills neighborhood features a rich variety of early-20th century architectural styles, and this year, Mission Hills Heritage (MHH) will be showcasing Prairie Style homes built in the 1910s and 1920s on its 11th annual Historic Home Tour.
Six houses will be open on Saturday, Sept. 26, for tour attendees to view the exterior and interior details of the residences. As an additional feature on the tour, there will be a showing of the 1920s historic United Church of Christ at 4070 Jackdaw St., a landmark in Mission Hills.
Prairie Style was developed by a group of Chicago architects who have become known as the Prairie School. Considered radical design from the perspective of Victorian America, features of the Prairie Style include a low-pitched, usually hipped roof, widely overhanging eaves with one-story wings or porches, cornices and façade detailing emphasizing horizontal lines, wide bands of windows and often massive, square porch supports.

Frank Lloyd Wright’s early work was in the Prairie Style and the famous architect was acknowledged as a master designer of the Prairie house. Many of the other Prairie architects worked with either Frank Lloyd Wright or with his earlier employer and teacher, Louis Sullivan.
How did the Prairie Style migrate to San Diego and Mission Hills? It originated in Chicago and the landmark examples are concentrated in that city’s early-20th century suburbs and other large Midwestern cities. However, vernacular examples were spread widely in pattern books and popular magazines such as Western Architect.
Seeking a new life in the West, numerous architects, builders and individuals traveled from the East and arrived in San Diego, introducing fresh and new home designs.
Irving Gill, a prominent San Diego architect, worked under Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright in Chicago. Gill built several Prairie Style homes and buildings in San Diego, and the style also influenced his later designs. The Prairie Style also caught on with many local San Diego builders working in Mission Hills, including Nathan Rigdon, Martin Melhorn, Alexander Schreiber and Morris B. Irvin. Local adaptations included hybrids combining elements of Craftsman, Mission, and even Mediterranean Revival Styles. Our milder climate provided designs for open balconies and porches instead of the enclosed porches of Chicago and pergolas and porte-cocheres with climbing wisteria, instead of the built-in planter boxes seen in the Midwest. The Spanish Revival Style replaced the Arts & Crafts and Prairie Styles in the 1920s; however, the Prairie Style greatly influenced later California styles such as Mid-Century Modern and Ranch.
Come and experience how San Diego architects and builders applied the Prairie Style to San Diego at Mission Hills’ Historic Home Tour.
Advanced reservations may be made online at brownpapertickets.com/event/2156710. For more information about Mission Hills Heritage, please visit MissionHillsHeritage.org. Email [email protected] or call 619-497-1193.
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