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The Yung See San Fong House was
completed in 1917 for Ruth Comfort Mitchell Young and her
husband,Sanborn Young
Photograph courtesy of the Town of Los Gatos |
Nestled in the picturesque hills above Los Gatos is the unique
and eclectic Yung See San Fong House, a combination of oriental
decorative motifs and pagoda roofs together with western massing
and layout. Yung See San Fong, "Young's Home in the Heart of the
Hills," was completed in 1917 by Ruth Comfort Mitchell Young,
a writer, and her husband, Sanborn Young, a gentleman farmer,
conservationist and later California State Senator.
Ruth Comfort Mitchell was born in San Francisco in 1882. Summers
were spent in Los Gatos, where her parents and grandparents had
summer homes. At the age of 14 her first poem was published in
the Los Gatos Mail newspaper, thus launching her literary
career, which continued throughout her lifetime. In 1914 literary
friends in San Francisco introduced Ruth to Sanborn Young. A native
of Chicago and a graduate of Northwestern University, Young had
recently sold his grain business and was traveling. The couple
were married in October 1914 in the Grand Canyon and moved to
New York, where Ruth continued her literary pursuits, and he studied
photography. In 1916 her play The Sweetmeat Game opened
at the Palace Theatre on
![[photo] [photo]](buildings/YUN2.jpg)
Living room fireplace of the Yung See San Fong House,
1980. For more Library of Congress images of this house, click here
Photograph by Jane Lidz, courtesy of Library of Congress,
Prints and Photographs Division, Historic American Buildings
Survey or Historic American Engineering Record, Reproduction
Number HABS, CAL,43-LOSGA,2-7 |
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Broadway starring Olive Wyndham. With a Chinese setting the successful
play toured the Orpheum circuit around the country for two years.
Ruth always loved Los Gatos and in 1916 the Youngs started building
Yung See San Fong on property granted to them by her parents. The
Sweetmeat Game provided her with the inspiration to combine
the best of oriental tastes and usage with her conception of beauty
and comfort in the building and furnishing of her home. Chinese
traditions were adhered to as exemplified by the winding road, which
was supposed to deter the devil from finding the house. A statue
of the Chinese God of Rice and Plenty still greets visitors at the
main gate. Yung See San Fong was basically a self-sustaining farm
where vegetables and poultry were raised.
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Garden statue on the grounds
of the Yung See San Fong House
Photograph courtesy of the Town of Los Gatos |
Sanborn Young devoted his energies to politics, photography, raising
racing dogs and beagles and investments. In 1925 Young was elected
a California State Senator and continued to serve until 1938. A
quiet, retiring man, it is said that he won the seat because of
his wife's campaigning. While in the Senate his primary interests
were the conservation of wild animals and narcotics control. In
1929 his bill to abolish saw-tooth traps was enacted. In the State
Senate Sanburn Young was head of the Narcotics Committee and introduced
legislation to control narcotics. Because of his expertise President
Herbert Hoover appointed Young as one of the United States delegates
to the International Conference for the Limitation of the Manufacture
of Drugs in 1931, which was held in Geneva, Switzerland. Attended
by 55 nations, the resulting treaty was partially drafted by Young.
These political ties developed into a close friendship between the
Youngs and the Hoovers, who resided in nearby Palo Alto. Among those
who frequented Yung See San Fong were movies stars Joan and Constance
Bennett, and Senator James Duval Phelan, one time mayor of San Francisco
and United StatesSenator, whose nearby residence, Villa
Montalvo, was the gathering place for the socially prominent,
political and literary notables.
The Yung See San Fong House is located at 16660 Cypress Way,
Los Gatos. It is a private residence and not open to the public.
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