A visit to Casa Romantica
It feels like it was a lifetime ago when we visited Casa Romantica in San Clemente. I have to say, this was a place we’d never heard of, but it was a big deal back in the days when it was built. In fact, the man who built the home in the Spanish Colonial Revival style was Ole Hanson, the founder of San Clemente.
A Spanish village by the sea
It was the Roaring Twenties and Ole Hanson, a land developer, had a vision. He wanted to build a Spanish village by the sea. He selected San Clemente as the site for his masterpiece. At the time, San Clemente was nothing more than barren California coastline. Still, Ole was a good promoter and sold over 300 lots, mostly to people from Los Angeles and the surrounding area.
In 1927, Ole and his partner hired an architect to design “La Casa Pacifica.” The project was a grand success—until the Great Depression. That’s when everything fell apart. Bank of America foreclosed on the property in 1934.
It’s a long road to recovery
The property was sold seven years later for the tidy sum of $10,000. Yes, you read that correctly. Ten grand. What a steal. That’s also when the name changed to Casa Romantica. Over the next 60 years, the property was sold several times, though never for a substantial profit. The big change came when the San Clemente Redevelopment Agency purchased the property in 2000 for a cool $2.5 million.
Poor Ole never profited from his vision, but the rest of us can. Enjoy this virtual trip to Casa Romantica, but don’t plan on moving in anytime too soon. The place is not for sale!
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Lorna Collins says
Casa Romantica was never the Western Whitehouse. That was several miles south. i used to be the wedding hostess for a church in nearby San Juan Capistrano. We held several wedding receptions there. It is a beautiful location and a community treasure.
Terry says
Thanks for correcting me, Lorna. I’m not sure where I picked that up, but I must have misread something somewhere. I didn’t remember it from our visit, either. I’ve made a correction to the post.