Built 1891 (1891) NRHP Reference # 86003681 Area 1,200 m² Added to NRHP 31 March 1987 | Architectural style Second Empire Opened 1891 Phone +1 559-782-7548 | |
![]() | ||
Location 393 N. Hockett St., Porterville, California Architect Templeton, Hugh; Templeton, John Address 393 N Hockett St, Porterville, CA 93257, USA Hours Open today · 10AM–4PMSaturday10AM–4PMSundayClosedMondayClosedTuesdayClosedWednesdayClosedThursday10AM–4PMFriday10AM–4PMSuggest an edit Similar Dumas Brothel, Lake Success, Rocky Point Manor, Los Coches Adobe, Glen Tavern Inn |
The zalud house investigation
The Zalud House is a historic house located at 393 N. Hockett St. in Porterville, California.
Contents
Secrets of the zalud house 2012
History
The house was built by John Zalud, a Porterville businessman, in 1891. Architects Hugh and John Templeton designed the building in the Second Empire style; the house is the only Second Empire home in Porterville. The design includes a mansard roof with decorated dormer windows, a front porch with wooden ornamentation, and tall double-hung sash windows on the front and sides. While the house was built in brick, a departure from the standard wood construction of Second Empire buildings, it uses wood extensively in its detailing. In 1977, the city of Porterville converted the house to a museum. The Zalud House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in March 31, 1987.
On television
On December 10, 2016, the Zalud House was the featured as a lockdown location on a season 13 episode of Ghost Adventures, where a 'cursed chair' in an upstairs bedroom caused visitors to have chest pains. In 1917, orange grower William Brookes (John Zalud's son-in-law) was murdered in this chair while sitting in the lobby of the former Pioneer Hotel. He was shot four times and killed by a married woman named Julia Howe, who didn't like what he was saying about her after bragging he had an affair with her.