During a span of roughly 80 hours this month, motorists and
pedestrians numbering in the thousands will flock to see Portland’s newest
and smallest National Register Historic District.
Most of them won’t know the historic designation exists,
or pay much attention to the architecture upon which it is based. Nope.
To be cutesy about it, they are coming for enlightenment in its archaic
form.
The street sign shown above is the clue that most
Portlanders will recognize. Peacock
Lane, a single street that runs for four blocks with no intersecting streets in
Southeast Portland, is widely known as the city’s “Christmas Street.”
Every year since the late 1940s -- the date
is not documented – owners of the 32 houses on both sides of Peacock Lane festoon
them with colorful Christmas lights. Some
add music or sometimes even moving decorations.
The lights are on five hours per night from Dec. 15 to 31. The first mention of Peacock Lane decorations
in the Oregonian newspaper was in 1949.
The tradition is maintained only by informal agreement among
the neighbors. As one owner once said,
nobody would buy a house on Peacock Lane if they didn’t want to be
involved. The event is not without grief
for the owners; aside from the labor of installation, driveways are rendered
useless each evening by the steady stream of one-way traffic. One can only imagine the chaos if an
ambulance or fire engine was needed in an emergency.
Neighbors sought and gained National Register status for
Peacock lane in 2017 after a developer demolished one original house and built a larger
new one. Residents hoped the national
status would provide protection from further demolitions. Although changing state and local
preservation rules are somewhat in flux, the result is “so far, so good.”
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Daytime view |
For the National Register listing, Peacock Lane is
recognized as an early Portland suburb designed as a planned community to
include automobiles. The houses were
designed and built by Richard F. Wassell, a designer and building who was
associated for a time with Carl Linde, an important Portland architect.
Wassell’s residential designs were mostly English cottage
and Tudor revival styles, generally about 1,900 to 2,000 square feet in
size. He designed the lane to include
garages, driveways and curbs and gutters.
Some of those elements were added later to older neighborhoods as cars
ascended as the primary mode of transportation over Portland’s elaborate
streetcar network.
Houses on Peacock Lane were constructed between 1923 and 1930. Walking the street today (in daylight) gives
a very definite feel of how it felt early on.
Most of the houses retain their original architectural form and materials. One historical analysis states, “The
architecture of the district is cohesive without being repetitive, an uncommon
trend in the 1920s.”
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Oh, yes. A few lights... |
In today’s urban geography, Peacock Lane would be considered
part of the central rather than as a suburb.
But even with its proximity to heavily travelled and noisy S.E. Cesar
Chavez Boulevard, it remains a quiet, tree-lined street. With cars parked on both sides, there is room
only for a single traffic lane.
Peacock Lane did not turn on the lights in 2020 because of
the pandemic. The visual feast resumes
this year. If you’re looking for the new
house that prompted creation of the historic district, it will be hard to
recognize at night. Like the others,
it is encrusted with holiday lights.
-----Fred Leeson
Join Building on History's mailing list by writing "add me" to fredleeson@hotmail.com
Peacock Lane is wonderful. One note. It is two-way traffic when the lights are on as there is no parking on either side of the street.
ReplyDeleteYou are correct. Residents must remove their vehicles from the street during the "lit" hours. When cars are parked on both sides, it is a one-lane street.
ReplyDelete