Ainsley House Explained

John Colpitts Ainsley House No. 3
Location:300 Grant St., Campbell, California
Coordinates:37.2886°N -121.9436°W
Architect:Addison M. Whiteside of Whiteside-Davidson Construction Co.
Architecture:Bungalow/craftsman, Arts and Crafts
Added:October 3, 2005
Refnum:05001086

Ainsley House is a 1925 California Arts and Crafts house in Campbell, California, built in the style of an English Tudor Cotswold cottage.[1] The house and accompanying carriage house (now the Wyland R. Morgan Gallery) were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005.[2] It is now a museum and is open to the public.

The house was the third home of Campbell canning pioneer John Colpitts Ainsley (1860–1937) and his wife, Alcinda (1875-1939), and was originally located on the southwest corner of their 83acres orchard at the northeast corner of Hamilton and Johnson (now Bascom) Avenues. After J.C. Ainsley's death in 1937, Alcinda left the house, living with friends until her death in 1939. The house remained in the family, but with the exception of occasional Christmas seasons and social events over the years, was vacant, though well-tended, for decades. The Ainsley family donated the house, its furnishings and the carriage house to the City of Campbell in 1989 and they were moved to their present location at 300 Grant Street in Downtown Campbell in 1990.[1] The house museum, Morgan Gallery and nearby Campbell Historical Museum are supported by the Campbell Historical Museum and Ainsley House Foundation.

Notes and References

  1. National Register of Historic Places, John Colpitts Ainsley House No. 3, Campbell, Santa Clara County, California, .
  2. Web site: Weekly list of actions taken on properties: 10/03/05 through 10/07/05 . October 14, 2005 . . March 2, 2014.