Public Comment

Open Letter to the Berkeley Landmarks Preservation Commission
Re: Denial of my request to initiate the Henry Osgood Noyes House (1892)

Daniella Thompson
Monday March 06, 2023 - 11:34:00 AM

Some of you have known me for many years, while others, I believe, have never heard of me. I’m a historian, author of hundreds of articles about Berkeley’s architectural history, long-time editor of the Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association website, and the recorder of the following 21 landmark applications: 

  1. Rev. Dr. Robert Bentley House (A.H. Broad, 1900), 2683 Le Conte Avenue
    Designated 2 Feb 1998
  2. George Edwards House (A.H. Broad, 1886), 2530 Dwight Way
    Designated 6 Apr 1998
  3. Josiah J. Rose-Goldsmith House (Josiah John Rose, builder, 1891), 2919 Lorina Street
    Designated 8 Sep 1998
  4. Theta Xi Chapter House (Drysdale & Thomsen, 1914), 1730 La Loma Avenue
    Designated 4 Jan 1999
  5. Prof. Stuart Daggett House (John Hudson Thomas, 1924, 1938), 1427 Hawthorne Terrace
    Designated 14 Jul 2003
  6. Laura Belle Marsh Kluegel House (John Hudson Thomas, 1911), 2667–69 Le Conte Ave
    Designated 3 August 2006
  7. Koerber Building (Berkeley Building Company, 1923), 2054 University Avenue
    Designated 3 September 2009
  8. Mary J. Berg House (William Garfield May, 1901), 2517 Regent Street
    Designated 1 November 2012
  9. Lucinda Reames House No. 1 (A. Dodge Coplin, 1902–1903), 2503 Regent Street
    Designated 2 October 2014
  10. Lucinda Reames House No. 2 (A. Dodge Coplin, 1903), 2509 Regent Street
    Designated 2 October 2014
  11. William Wilkinson House (A. Dodge Coplin, 1903), 2511 Regent Street
    Designated 2 October 2014
  12. Channing Apartments (Walter H. Ratcliff, Jr., 1913), 2409 College Avenue
    Designated 5 February 2015
  13. Hull Undertaking Co. & Little Chapel of the Flowers (Hutchison & Mills, 1923); Francis Harvey Slocombe, 1928), 3049–3051 Adeline Street
    Designated 3 September 2015
  14. Bennington Apartments (1892; 1915), 2508 Ridge Road
    Designated 4 February 2016
  15. Ali & Marion Yazdi Building (William I. Garren, 1933), 2910–2912 Telegraph Avenue
    Designated 7 July 2016
  16. Captain John Slater House (Thomas J. Welsh, 1894), 1335 Shattuck Avenue
    Designated 2 February 2017
  17. Charles H. Spear House (Robert Greig, builder, 1904), 1905 Martin Luther King, Jr. Way
    Designated 6 July 2017
  18. Thomas & Louise Hicks House (Chapin A. Martin, builder, 1904), 2901 Benvenue Ave
    Designated 1 March 2018
  19. Captain James & Cecilia Luttrell House (Ira A. Boynton, 1889), 2328 Channing Way
    Designated 2 July 2020
  20. William & Esther Payson House (Lord & Boynton, 1889), 1915 Berryman Street
    Denied 6 August 2020
  21. James T. Stocker-Loni Ding House (James T. Stocker, 1901), 1940 Hearst Avenue
    Designated 3 March 2022
 

Until a few years ago, the LPC always complied with my requests to initiate historic structures, and as you can see from the list above, I always delivered thoroughly researched, comprehensive landmark applications in a timely manner. 

It was therefore a deep disappointment to me that the five commissioners present at the LPC meeting of 2 March 2023 decided to take no action on my request to initiate the Henry Osgood Noyes House (1892) at 2531 Ridge Road. 

I had provided the commission with an 8-page document in which I outlined the reasons for my request. In the cover letter, I wrote that I could deliver a complete landmark application within a month (I have researched and written about this property and others in the Daley’s Scenic Park tract numerous times). I also explained, in writing, as well as orally, that for various personal and family reasons, it is a hardship for me to gather signatures on a petition. 

Given the age of the Noyes House, its being the last recognizable Queen Anne Victorian in the Daley’s Scenic Park tract, and the house’s unique history, I would have expected that an LPC initiation would be readily forthcoming. 

I can only conclude that the five commissioners present on 2 March 2023: 

  1. did not read my 8-page explanatory document, which was included in the agenda packet; or
  2. read the document but decided in advance that the structure does not possess sufficient merit for initiation.
Whether the first or the second assumption (or a combination of both) is true, they serve as a disincentive for preservation and deter community members from writing landmark applications. If the commissioners did not read the request for initiation, they would not be likely to read the full landmark application either (mine are hefty tomes). If they did read the document and decided a priori that the structure is not worthy, I would be wasting my time toiling over a landmark application, in addition to having to gather petition signatures. 

On the evening of the 2 March 2023 LPC meeting, I did not stay past my public comment remarks owing to urgent family obligations, but it was reported to me afterwards that “Commissioner Montgomery mentioned three prior initiations that did not result in submissions and did not want to have any more of that happening.” 

Even if some initiations do not result in submitted applications (which has never been my case in the past 25 years), what does it cost the commission to make the work of preservation a little easier for applicants? Why punish the entire preservation community because of a few omitted submissions? Why do the commissioners ignore the massive work required to complete and submit a landmark application? 

Your commission’s name includes the word “preservation,” and Berkeley would be a better place if your actions honored the name. 

I request once again that you initiate the Henry Osgood Noyes House (1892) at 2531 Ridge Road. If you do, I will complete the landmark application. If you don’t, this will be the end of my efforts on behalf of this building.