Hidden Treasure: Hunting for the history of your home (Community Voices)

Bellevue-Staten Apartments in Oakland (Photo by Amy Hengst: www.inkweave.com)

Bellevue-Staten Apartments in Oakland (Photo by Amy Hengst: www.inkweave.com)

Oakland's storied past doesn't just reside in its ghosts.

Every dwelling tells tales in the way it's built - from the foundation to the trusses. The cityscape has some 150,000 occupied housing units within its borders. Structures without landmark status typically remain behind the scenes.

If you have an interest in uncovering the mysteries of the place you call home, you can get some answers at the Oakland Cultural Heritage Survey. Located in the city of Oakland's Community and Economic Development Agency, the archive holds countless records of the city's buildings.

"Very occasionally, people come in with ghost stories," archivist Betty Marvin said. Her blunt pragmatism belies her compact frame, which is draped with long, silver hair. "They look at the address directories, see who lived there, and say, 'That must be the ghost,' and they're quite pleased with themselves."

I came to the heritage survey, or OCHS, in search of ghosts, but not the haunting kind. Before he moved, a next door neighbor who lived in the Glenview for decades told me about my late grandma's house.

"The husband played the piano and blasted the music through an amp rigged to the front window," he said.

Eager to learn more about this Park Boulevard Liberace and his home, I visited Marvin with only an address in hand.

When I walked into the OCHS enclave, Marvin unfurled the Sanborn maps on a huge wooden table. She helped me decipher the now re-named streets and color-coded blocks that said what buildings had walls of brick or wood. With each new updated Sanborn, the bungalows sprouted amidst plots of land.

Marvin also busted out the city directories, newsletters and even walking tour notes about the neighborhood. In one dusty volume, I looked up the address and found that a couple named Mr. and Mrs. Chew lived there. They were both registered as republicans. Mrs. Chew appeared in the directory as "housewife" and Edward Chew as an urban planner. Could this be my piano player?

Having read back issues of the Glenview News, I found that the mostly German and Irish residents didn't always welcome their Asian neighbors. Still, it seemed that the Chews had a happy life there. The next door neighbor said he liked to pipe up when the Key System trolley rolled down the street, or when an unsuspecting pedestrian passed by. "They would often jump up in their tracks," he said.

For more background information on Mr. and Mrs. Chew, Marvin suggested I visit the California Genealogical Society and Library. This spot has more details on the personalities (or ghosts) who once lived in the Golden State.

Marvin also recommended that I bring house photos to the OCHS so she can copy them for the archive. Someday I'll bring pictures taken by the contractor builder who bought the house from the Chews. Taken in the 1980s, the yellowed photographs portray the Oakland twist on the Arts and Crafts movement: Pueblo-style mixed with a California Bungalow design.

The builder also said that they Meyer lemon tree in the backyard belonged to the Chews. It still stands there, next to the redwood tree my grandma stole from a Santa Rosa construction site ... but that's another story.

Want to dig for your home's story?


What to know before you go:

1. First, read the manual: The Oakland Heritage Alliance - OHA - posts a useful brochure online about researching the history of your home.

2. Before you visit the Oakland Cultural Heritage Survey, Marvin suggests that you bring any "pre-existing puzzle pieces" to share with the archive. She and co-archivist Gayle Lombardi will be happy to help.

3. Check out the Oakland History Room, located in the main branch of the Oakland Public Library. As the OHA's brochure suggests, the History Room has more developed records for buildings built before 1910. They also have file folders for the city's neighborhoods. And if your block had a running newspaper, check the microfiche in the main library for street stories from back in the day. For more resources, see the OHA brochure.

Patsy K. Eagan is a nonfiction writer who covers city history and culture. Her articles have appeared in publications like Elle, Bitch and Oakland Magazine, and she also writes events for a mobile application company called Dibbs. An Oakland native, Patsy currently lives in Reno, Nevada. Email her at oaklandgrown@yahoo.com.