Exterior view of Spanish-revival style building, with three arched entrances, porch, Spanish tile roof, wall lamps, neon-lighted sign near roof reading El Encanto, smaller sign on wall reading Midwick View Estates, with shrubs and flowers in midground, low wavy wall in foreground
View of rectangular pond with concrete rim, no water, grating visible at bottom, with metal or concrete flowers or support structures, surrounded by foliage
Strip of lawn divided by a walkway with planting beds on either side. The beds contain rose standards and other flowers. The house, with a screened-in porch, is in the
Pond with boulders, with street, houses, and trees in background, grass in foreground, and statue on boulder at right, probably bronze, of standing man with head bent forward, holding tablet or book, wearing boots
The Heberton residence, also known as the as Casa Dracaena and El Hogar, was built by the architect George Washington Smith for himself in 1917. It was an immediate success and commissions for similar houses soon began. Ultimately Smith designed 80 houses (of which 54 were built) in the Santa Barbara area and he is often credited as starting the Spanish-Colonial Revival style of architecture in the United States.
Bettye K. Cree (Elizabeth Kirkpatrick Cree) was born March 24, 1879. She married Raymond Cree, a founder and developer of Palm Springs, but the marriage ended in divorce. Ms. Cree then maintained an art gallery in Palm Springs. She died in Pasadena on March 16, 1944.
The Giardini Botanici Hanbury (also known as La Mortola, or Hanbury Botanical Garden, or Villa Hanbury), on the cape of Mortola, are major botanical gardens operated by the University of Genoa. The gardens were founded by Sir Thomas Hanbury, a British entrepreneur, after he had made his fortune in China.