by Tom York
SDFWA members dazzled by the prowess of woodworkers and stained glass makes during a tour of historic Villa Montezuma in downtown San Diego
Members of SDFWA took an unusual shop tour on Saturday. June 8, when they visit the Village Montezuma Museum just east of downtown San Diego in the Sherman Heights neighborhood.
World-class pianist Jesse Shepard built the historic house in 1887 at an exorbitant cost of $26,000 in 1880 values.
The interior features room after room filled with intricately carved woodwork and molding as well as rare stained glass and hand-painted windows, which was of great interest to the visiting woodworkers.
Shepard became a short-lived owner. He sold the house just two years after construction and detail work was completed and left town to tour the major cities of Europe. He never returned.
The property went through a series of owners until 1971 when the city of San Diego bought the property as a donation from the San Diego Historical Society.
Representatives from the nonprofit Friends of the Villa Montezuma Museum led woodworkers through the two-story structure, which holds many examples of late 19th-century craftsmanship, especially lots of finishing details and carvings in the ample wood interior.
Docents explained to the visiting woodworkers that the second phase of a $5 million restoration program will soon get underway, which will feature repairing and repainting the exterior of the Victorian-era structure.
Few repairs are contemplated for the inside, given the successful preservation of the woodwork and special stained glass in the window.
The shop tour was conducted in three sessions because of capacity limitations in the home, and all who attended were awed by the many aspects of great woodworking.
Written by Tom York
Daily newspaper reporter and editor for years and years.