<P>... the California literary agents Elizabeth Pomada and Michael Larsen published Painted Ladies, a photo essay on the modern painting practices of San Francisco . Fantastically colorful and published in an inexpensive paperback, this often tongue - in - cheek record of a Bay Area phenomenon has subsequently been embraced by large numbers of well - meaning Americans thinking too often that they were following a historical precedent . Painted Ladies and its sequels say more about the taste of the 1970s and 1980s than they do about the 1870s and 1880s . </P> <P> Since then, the term has also been used to describe groups of colorfully repainted Victorian houses in other American cities, such as the Charles Village neighborhood in Baltimore; Lafayette Square in St. Louis; the greater San Francisco and New Orleans areas, in general; Columbia - Tusculum in Cincinnati; the Old West End in Toledo, Ohio; the neighborhoods of McKnight and Forest Park in Springfield, Massachusetts; and the city of Cape May, New Jersey . </P> <P> About 48,000 houses in the Victorian and Edwardian styles were built in San Francisco between 1849 and 1915 (with the change from Victorian to Edwardian occurring on the death of Queen Victoria in 1901), and many were painted in bright colors . As one newspaper critic noted in 1885, "...red, yellow, chocolate, orange, everything that is loud is in fashion...if the upper stories are not of red or blue...they are painted up into uncouth panels of yellow and brown ..." While many of the mansions of Nob Hill were destroyed by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, thousands of the mass - produced, more modest houses survived in the western and southern neighborhoods of the city . </P> <P> During World War I and World War II, many of these houses were painted battleship gray with war - surplus Navy paint . Another sixteen thousand were demolished, and many others had the Victorian decor stripped off or covered with tarpaper, brick, stucco, or aluminum siding . </P>

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