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BURBANK’S LOST HOUSE

(UPDATED 2024) Santa Rosa made plenty of nitwit decisions in the 1960s (freeway, city hall compound, splitting Courthouse Square, etc.) and on that list of mistakes was allowing a developer to tear down Luther Burbank’s home. What’s that, you say? Burbank’s old house still exists? Sorry – Luther moved out of the cramped little farmhouse as soon as his nice new home across the street was completed.

Burbank lived in his fine place on Tupper street from 1906 until his death in 1926. During this time it was his home-office, with almost all of the first floor dedicated to running his business. After he moved, Burbank referred to his former residence and surrounding grounds as the “Old Homestead,” or just the “Experimental Farm.” Burbank’s focus was clearly on the new house; It was on those front steps that he was photographed with Edison, Henry Ford, and other celebs that came calling, and he turned his front yard into a showcase for Shasta Daisies or other “new creations” that he sought to promote.

Thanks to the Press Democrat’s 1906 gossip columnist Dorothy Anne, we have a detailed description of Burbank’s lost home, transcribed below. It was in the modern Craftsman style and larger than it may appear in photos – besides the five upstairs bedrooms and private den, there was a reception room, library, big main office for Burbank and his secretary, and photograph catalog room.

After Burbank died, his widow Elizabeth soon moved back into the farmhouse and the house was leased or sold in 1933 to the Burbank Business College with the understanding “Luther Burbank’s office and the room in which he died will be preserved for all time,” according to the Press Democrat. It was later sold to the Salvation Army, which leased it to the County Farm Bureau in 1945 until the group made it their own headquarters in 1947. The Santa Rosa Urban Renewal Agency (URA) purchased it in 1963 and demolished the home in 1964. The shocking story of why the city did that can be read in “TEARING DOWN BURBANK’S HOUSE.”

burbankcolorWhile there are a great many photographs of the house, few are in color and most of those were postcards, where a black-and-white image was hand-tinted, then often printed in oversaturated color. We know it was originally red-brown with a grey roof; Dorothy Anne claimed it was exactly the color seen at right, although she does not mention how she knew the formula. In the mid-1910s it became a grey house with a red roof, as seen above. This is confirmed by a color photograph in “Luther Burbank: his methods and discoveries and their practical application” Vol 12, 1915, where the grey walls are partially covered in ivy. When it was sold in 1933 it was described as “red adobe.” The sand-colored house below is almost certainly a colorist’s error and appears to be a do-over of the same image shown immediately above it. Note that the caption is wrong and the foliage in the foreground of both images is fake.

 

(Photos courtesy the Sonoma County Library Luther Burbank Home & Gardens Collection unless otherwise noted)

 

 

Burbank’s yard with red poppies from “Luther Burbank: his methods and discoveries and their practical application” Vol 12, 1915

 

This early photograph of the Burbank home on Tupper street was probably the underlying source for the following two altered postcards. (Image: Sonoma County Library Western Sonoma County Historical Society Collection)
Early photograph of the Burbank home on Tupper street. (Image: Sonoma County Library Western Sonoma County Historical Society Collection)

 

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Corner of Tupper St. and Santa Rosa Ave. with Burbank information kiosk in foreground, 1910
Corner of Tupper St. and Santa Rosa Ave. with Burbank information kiosk in foreground, 1910

 

Luther Burbank in the library of his home on Tupper street, 1906
Luther Burbank in the library of his home on Tupper street, 1906

 

Mr. Burbank’s New Home

Mr. Burbank’s new home aroused my interest and curiosity many months ago, when one day while driving I espied two men excavating in the lot where rumor had told me he intended to erect a dwelling.

I watched the sacks of cement, piled up directly against the fence, the lumber and timbers, the bundles of slate roofing, the bricks for the chimneys, the big kegs of nails, disappear from their respective places in the lot, as they were slowly but surely worked in to shape by the artisans, until now the structure stands before us completed. A substantial, commodious home of twelve rooms, [illegible microfilm] equipment, beautiful in fixtures and furnishing and attractive every decoration.

The architecture is a combination of Colonial, Old Mission, and Burbank. Its square [illegible] and massive roof bespeaks of old Mission days, while [illegible] bordering the wide Southern veranda with its basket-work tiled floor, and supporting the balcony above tell of Colonial times. Mr. Burbank added to these two styles an Italian pergola.

The house is a frame structure, its exterior of cement on wire netting. In the interior there is no plastering, compo board being used. The slate roof, with its projecting cornices, is supported by girders resting on lookout beams. If you mix Venetian red and yellow ochre you have the exact shade in which the house is painted, with dark, cream trimmings.

Mr. Burbank’s home, which is patterned somewhat after his late father’s home in Lancaster, has no flashing coloring, nor extravagant furnishings, no gaudy carpets, no jarring interior finishings. All is sensible, harmonious and artistic.

Upon entering the house, I was struck by two things, its warmth and comfort and the harmonious color decorations of walls, woodwork, and furniture. I had to go through but a few of the rooms to discover Mr. Burbank’s favorite color. It was the beautiful golden brown shades that commence in a pale champagne and merge into the richest, warmest golden-red brown. All through the house these shades predominate, with the exception of the sleeping apartments.

On crossing the threshold, at the front door I found myself in a large, commodious hall finished in weathered oak, carpeted in brown, at the end of which is a grand staircase. On the west side is the reception room, connecting with a large library by an archway. These two rooms, lighted by big broad windows on the south and west are finished in natural redwood, highly polished, and are papered in a tapestry papering, combining the colors of red, green and brown so adroitly that it closely resembles the fine old tapestries of England. These rooms are furnished in heavy mahogany furniture, with green rugs and hangings. The walls of the library are lined with low book-shelves, well-filled with modern signatured books. On the east side of the room was blazing a bright fire, but throughout there was a homelike glow of light and comfort.

Leaving the library and stepping out into the hall, I found at the foot of the stairs a doorway leading into a room furnished in light wood and papered in a pale shade of yellow. This is where Mr. Burbank keeps his private collection of thousands of photographs. The room, although a north one, is particularly well adapted for this purpose, for its broad leaded windows on the north light it wonderfully well.

To the right of the front door as one enters is a small reception room. Here many titled personages and celebrities, and all persons desiring to see Mr. Burbank will await his pleasure. It is comfortably furnished with easy lounging chairs and table, on which is scattered reading matter, so the waiting will not be made too tedious. But Mr. Burbank is an extremely busy man, a hard worker, and much as he would like to give his time to people who desire to see him, it is generally an impossibility.

Opening to the east from the reception room is the main office, complete in office regalia of desks, stenographer’s outfit, telephone, letter files, books for reference, etc.

The east side of the office borders on the hall which leads to the kitchen. This hall connects with the cross hall that runs at right angles from the main hall. Out of this cross hall on the north opens the dining room. This room is not large in its proportions, but is extremely comfortable in appearance, with its Sierra pine finishings and furnishings. The china closet, sideboard and pass closets are built in on the east end, giving a substantially finished appearance.

The kitchen, out of which opens a large and commodious pantry, is not too big to be a burden to the caretaker. It is finished in sugar pine, with white walls, which makes a good background for the glistening new range, spotless tables and the bright linoleum on the floor.

Mr. Burbank’s mother’s room is the extreme east corner facing south. Here a sweet-faced old lady of ninety-three years sits by the window in a comfortable big rocker, watching with interest the people who come and go to and from the house. Her room, Mr. Burbank with his customary kindness and thoughtfulness for her comfort, has furnished just as she desired, with heavy walnut furniture, comfortable easy chairs and her own treasures. Truly this little old lady, with her frilled lace cap, her dainty apron, over the neat black dress, sitting by the window makes a pretty picture in her celebrated son’s new home.

I climbed the broad stairs slowly, admiring the particularly pretty weathered-oak banisters, until two-thirds of the way up on the landing I paused to open the door, and look down the back stairway. Imagine a back stairway that is light; that has broad steps; that is easy of descent; one on which the ceiling is not so close that endanger your brains when you stand erect in descending! Can you conceive of all these four surprises on one back stairway? Mr. Burbank has them in his. Surely he should have as much credit for this as for the production of a new plant!

Mr. Burbank’s den was next inspected. This is a medium-sized room facing south, finished in light wood and paper, with a paper that combines the shades of deep brown and light pink. This den is Mr. Burbank’s sanctum sanctorium. When he wants to be absolutely alone either to rest, to study or to write, it is to this room he repairs. It is well furnished with a big desk, comfortable lounging chair, his chosen books and his personal souvenirs. The bevel plateglass door opening upon the balcony will enable Mr. Burbank at any time to step out and survey the progress of the work being done by his employees in his experimental grounds opposite. He also intends to sleep upon this balcony, he says, in the summer time.

Opening from the den is the sleeping apartment of Mr. Burbank. This room, with expansive southern and eastern windows is simple in its furnishings. A modest pale blue enameled bed harmonizes with the delicate oak finishings and dainty light-blue wall decorations. A bureau of oak, a table, a convenient chair or two, plain matting with rugs, complete its furnishings.

Off this bedroom is a closet so extensive in size that it would arouse the jealousy of any woman viewing it. It so impressed me that I could not help saying: “You don’t mean to say that you intend to occupy all this alone?”

Mr. Burbank looked at me with a quizzical expression that inferred that I had lost my reason.

“Rumor says,” I commenced bravely–but got no farther. A light of intelligence broke over his face, he shook his head, laughed heartily and said, “I deny emphatically any such intentions. That report is absolutely without foundation.”

I was disappointed. I had thought I had a “scoop.” [Editor: Burbank married his second wife, Elizabeth, ten years later.]

The guest chamber on the southwest end is finished in delicate shades of pink and cream, and is as yet unfurnished.

The bedroom at the northwest corner is furnished with a view of making comfortable any visiting relative. It is furnished with a birds-eye maple set with brass bed, and is papered in a delicate shade of cream, has a charmingly artistic window-seat running along its big west window, and a splendid clothes and hat closet.

A servant’s room on the north side completes the upper floor, with the exception of a good-sized linen closet and a big tiled bathroom with its white porcelain tub, basins and other conveniences of the modern, up-to-date bathroom.

In the cement basement I found the secret of the genial warmth of the house, for here roared a big furnace sending up the heat in six large pipes. The neat piles of wood on all sides showed that winter cold will not affect that home.

It is with regret that we see Mr. Burbank leave the pretty little vine-clad cottage he has occupied for sixteen years, and from which he has actually been crowded out because of lack of space. There he has lived quietly and unostentatiously, [sic] with his mother by his side, and there by his study, industry and genius, he has risen step by step to pre-eminence in horticultural fame.

May his new home bring new thoughts, new inspirations, new hopes realized, new joys, new pleasures and new honors–for honors fast continue to crown Mr. Burbank, the most distinguished horticulturalist in the world.

Mr. Burbank wishes me to state that his home is not on public exhibition.

– Press Democrat, December 22, 1906

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MEET THE SANTA ROSA PLUM

Luther Burbank only named a handful of plants after his adopted hometown, so it’s fair to assume that the Santa Rosa Plum was so named in harmony with business interests that sought to promote Santa Rosa in the autumn following the 1906 earthquake.

Below: The authorized Santa Rosa Plum photograph from “Luther Burbank: his methods and discoveries and their practical application,” Vol 5, 1914

SANTA ROSA PLUM THING OF BEAUTY
Luther Burbank Names Delicious Fruit After His Home Town and it Will Be Introduced This Winter

Luther Burbank has named one of his latest and best plum creations the “Santa Rosa Plum,” and for the first time this winter it will leave his hands to be distributed over the fruit-growing world. Mr. Redding, of Fresno, one of the largest nurserymen on the Pacific Coast, has secured from Mr. Burbank the exclusive right to introduce the plum. The same gentleman is also introducing Burbank’s new walnut trees–the rapid timber producer–and a new plumcot.

The Santa Rosa Plum is considered one of the best-ever produced, both in quality, flavor, etc. Nurserymen all over the country, who have seen and tasted it are unanimous in pronouncing it so.

– Press Democrat, November 22, 1906

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MUST LUTHER BURBANK BE MURDERED PIECEMEAL?

Pity Luther Burbank; his single greatest invention was his own celebrity — yet he craved solitude and loathed the public that adored him.

As mentioned in an earlier piece on Burbank, he faced an exhausting daily siege from tourists, some assuming they would have a nice visit with him and chat about their begonias, or something. An essay published years later documented his torment: “Passing from the garage to the house he runs the gauntlet of outstretched hands and cheery greetings. He bows right and left and impatiently tells the callers he regrets that he cannot stop to talk with them. At the door a man waylays him and grabs his hand only to be thrust aside. Another more daring than the rest follows him into his study…after Burbank finally sits down to lunch the telephone announces that a party of 75 or 100 persons have arrived in town and wish to be conducted over his gardens. The local Chamber of Commerce secretary protests that the party was sent over by a travel bureau, a plan that Burbank had approved months earlier…”

Burbank was in a quandary. While his business success depended on his continued superstar-class fame as the “plant wizard,” he simply couldn’t work with adoring fans pestering him, supposedly six thousand in 1905 alone (curiously, that same figure was also quoted for 1904 and 1906). Making matters worse, his home and gardens were not on some remote country road, but just a few inviting steps away from downtown Santa Rosa.

Burbank first tried to fend off the unwelcome rabble by selling permits that would allow someone to talk to him for a few minutes. When that didn’t work, he took to adding testy signs around his yard. Posted just inside his otherwise-neighborly white picket fence was the first notice:

NOTHING FOR SALE
ALL VISITORS CALL AT THE DOOR

Further in was another warning:

ALL VISITORS ARE LIMITED
TO FIVE MINUTES EACH UNLESS
BY SPECIAL APPOINTMENT

Those undaunted (or clueless) then had to fill out a questionnaire, as noted in another book. “…Should a person succeed in running the gauntlet of these protective signs, there is still another provision which must be faced. When the inside of the door is reached, this slip is in readiness. I take the current one from the block on a day in May, 1905:”

None of that apparently slowed the ill-mannered tide, and the following year, overt threats were posted on every gate:

POSITIVELY NO VISITORS ALLOWED.
WARNING!
ANY PERSON ENTERING OR TRESPASSING ON
THESE GROUNDS WILL BE PROSECUTED.

As reported in the Press Democrat item below, Burbank — sorry, “the Friends and Relatives of Luther Burbank” — also printed a circular that went still further, implying that the ignorant masses were endangering the great man’s life by even writing to ask a question or seek work (although Burbank’s secretary was already sending a rejection form letter to all job-seekers). It closed with a blunt warning to keep away from him and his property: “The public has no moral, legal or other right to invade his grounds, his home, his private office or his laboratories.” The whole tactless missive can be found in a August 5, 1906 New York Times profile:

First–Mr. Burbank has nothing for sale.

Second–He is not a nurseryman, not a florist, not a seedsman, not a dealer, and not a raiser of any kind of plants or seeds for sale.

Third–He is an originator of new kinds of useful and ornamental trees, flowers, fruits, vegetables, grasses, and grains.

A great portion of his time is utterly wasted in replying to questions which should never have been asked of him. Even by the most strenuous efforts and with all the stenographic force which can be accommodated, many of his letters have to remain from three to six months before a brief moment of time can be obtained even to briefly reply. Alas! There are only twenty-four hours in each day.

Over 6,000 visitors were received on his grounds during the year 1904. All the important experimental work was delayed beyond recall, grounds overrun with crowds from day-light to ten o’clock at night, no rest even on Sundays or holidays. Business destroyed, rare plants died from want of care. Attention constantly drawn from legitimate matters, letters neglected, telegrams delayed; meals taken standing, sleep disturbed, health at the point of destruction, visitors calling at all hours, without regard to Mr. Burbank’s convenience, each one being under the fixed and unalterable impression that he or she was the one particular one who should be admitted.

This was too much. The question arose, Should he continue his valuable researches undisturbed, or should he be murdered piecemeal as a showman?

The public has no moral, legal or other right to invade his grounds, his home, his private office or his laboratories.

WILL PUT STOP TO ANNOYANCE

People Pester Mr. Burbank With Foolish Questions and Ask for Positions

On account of the great annoyance given Mr. Luther Burbank, the eminent horticulturist, by people writing all kinds of questions, some of them very foolish, and all of them expecting an answer from him, and on account of the scores of applications for positions that pour in upon him, when in reality he has no positions to offer, and is not in the employment business as many of the inquiries seem to imply, a circular letter, making some plain statements, is being sent out in response to the hundreds of inquiries made and it is signed “By the Relatives and Friends of Luther Burbank.”

This step had to be taken in an endeavor to check the endless flow of correspondence, much of which is, as stated, altogether unnecessary and including some of the most ridiculous queries imaginable in order to let Mr. Burbank have an opportunity to give more attention to the great work he has in hand.

Hundreds of letters, for instance, come to the Burbank residence, asking the price of this plant or that, or something else. The reply being sent is to the effect that Mr. Burbank has nothing to sell, and that he is not a florist or nurseryman in the ordinary acceptance of the term, as many of the writers evidently suppose. The letter further states that Mr. Burbank places his creations in the hands of the great seedsmen of this country, and in other countries, comprising the greater part of the world, and a list of them is given.

The letter states that as each applicant for a position is received it is registered, and to date no less than 2,552 applications have been made and mail brings more. Attention is also called to the hordes of callers that annually visit Mr. Burbank, on no particular mission except to hinder him in his work, and each caller expecting that it is his or her right to have their questions answered by Mr. Burbank.

As stated the main reason for sending out the circular letter is to check the demand upon Mr. Burbank’s time, allow him to devote more attention to his work in giving the world new fruits and flowers, and more important still, give him a little rest.

– Press Democrat, February 3, 1906

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