Marker Logo HMdb.org THE HISTORICAL
MARKER DATABASE
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Historical Markers and War Memorials in Dallas County

 
Clickable Map of Dallas County, Texas and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Dallas County, TX (393) Collin County, TX (204) Denton County, TX (111) Ellis County, TX (111) Kaufman County, TX (93) Rockwall County, TX (15) Tarrant County, TX (354)  DallasCounty(393) Dallas County (393)  CollinCounty(204) Collin County (204)  DentonCounty(111) Denton County (111)  EllisCounty(111) Ellis County (111)  KaufmanCounty(93) Kaufman County (93)  RockwallCounty(15) Rockwall County (15)  TarrantCounty(354) Tarrant County (354)
Dallas is the county seat for Dallas County
Adjacent to Dallas County, Texas
      Collin County (204)  
      Denton County (111)  
      Ellis County (111)  
      Kaufman County (93)  
      Rockwall County (15)  
      Tarrant County (354)  
 
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201 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas — 6822 — Pleasant Mound Cemetery
At the intersection of two well-traveled pioneer roads, now Buckner Blvd. and Scyene Rd., this cemetery serves as a reflection of the heritage of this area. Burials took place on the property as early as 1869, but the first marked grave, that of . . . Map (db m158736) HM
202 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas — 6836 — Reichenstein Home
Dallas native Jacob Reichenstein (1881 - 1950) became a leader in the city's retail lumber trade. Beginning as a clerk with Cowser and Company in 1902, he was made a partner and general manager in 1915 and president of the company three years . . . Map (db m152389) HM
203 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas — 6846 — Reinhardt Elementary School
Reinhardt Elementary School traces its history to the 1880s, when a small frame schoolhouse was built on the farm of John Chenault to serve children of early settlers in this vicinity. After the Santa Fe Railroad built a line through the area and . . . Map (db m151491) HM
204 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas — 6853 — Rylie Cemetery
In 1878, John Armstrong Rylie donated land at this site for use as a school by settlers of this part of southeast Dallas County. The property came into service as a cemetery with the burial of Redden Allumbaugh in 1889. Since that time, more than . . . Map (db m155784) HM
205 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas — 6854 — Rylie Prairie
Named for the family of James and Mary Rylie, who came to Texas from Illinois about 1846, Rylie Prairie was a thriving community in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. A post office opened in 1883, and in 1884 streets were platted near the . . . Map (db m155740) HM
206 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas — 6813 — Site of Peacock Military Academy
The original Peacock Military Academy was founded in 1894 in San Antonio by Wesley Peacock, a well-known educator and child psychologist. In 1930 Peacock opened a north Texas branch of the school at this site to provide military, academic, and . . . Map (db m158704) HM
207 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas — 6894 — Texas’ First Airmail and Passenger Service
Love Field witnessed two “firsts” in Texas aviation history. National Air Transport (later became United Air Lines) on May 12, 1926, inaugurated first airmail service in Texas, and on Sept. 1, 1927, flew the first passengers and express. . . . Map (db m97765) HM
208 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas — 6901 — Trinity Farms/Rancho Grande Cemetery
This cemetery represents the last remaining physical reminder of the community of people who worked and lived on a vast commercial farm here known as the Dallas County Trinity Farms from about 1915 to 1946. The farm covered about 3,000 acres of . . . Map (db m152235) HM
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209 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas — 6905 — Turtle Creek Pump Station
Constructed in 1909 as a 15 million gallons per day primary pumping station for the city water supply, this brick industrial building was designed by Dallas architect C. A. Gill. Its location on high ground afforded protection from floods that had . . . Map (db m148943) HM
210 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas — 6727 — W. W. Glover Cemetery
Early Dallas County settler George W. Glover acquired this land in 1844. The property was first used as a cemetery for the interment of five-year old Sarah Beeman who died on Mar. 22, 1857. In 1872 Glover deeded the property to his son William . . . Map (db m158727) HM
211 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas — 13064 — White Rock Dam, Reservoir and Park
Early Dallas residents relied on natural springs, Artesian Wells and the Trinity River for their water. By the early 1900s, these sources began to prove inadequate for the growing city. In 1909, under Mayor Stephen J. Hay, the city began acquiring . . . Map (db m151483) HM
212 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas — 6923 — Woodrow Wilson High School
Built in 1927-28 to serve the growing student population in east Dallas, this was the seventh high school in the city. An important example of the period revivals which characterized architecture of the 1920s, this structure reflects the . . . Map (db m151393) HM
213 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Buckner Terrace / Everglade Park — 6606 — Buckner Baptist Children's Home
Founded out of concern for dependent, orphaned children, this institution opened in 1879 under the guidance of the Rev. Robert Cooke Buckner (d. 1919). Originally known as Buckner Orphan's Home, the first structure on this site was built in 1880 . . . Map (db m158643) HM
214 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cedar Crest — 6657 — Colonel William G. Cooke
To the memory of Colonel William G. Cooke and forty other members of the Regular Army Republic of Texas who camped in this vicinity in October, 1840 while locating the Central National Highway. The importance of this military road in the history . . . Map (db m153631) HM
215 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cedar Crest — 6674 — Dallas Zoo
The Dallas Zoo traces its history to 1888, when the city purchased two deer and two mountain lions and placed them in pens in the City Park. In the 1890s, with the support of Dallas citizens, the City Council provided funds for the zoo, and . . . Map (db m175228) HM
216 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cedar Crest — 22429 — Greater El Bethel Missionary Baptist Church
Following Emancipation, formerly enslaved people often formed their own communities, schools and churches. Within these communities, churches acted as vital spiritual, cultural, economic and social resources for African Americans. In Oak Cliff's . . . Map (db m211932) HM
217 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cedar Crest — 6762 — Lisbon Cemetery
In 1870 Samuel Sloan (1811-92) and E. A. Gracey (1837 - 1915) donated five acres of land near the center of the pioneer town of Lisbon, now part of Dallas, as a church and cemetery site. The oldest known grave is that of James J. Dowd, who died . . . Map (db m162174) HM
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218 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cedar Crest — 6801 — Oak Cliff Cemetery
Kentucky native William S. Beaty came to Texas during its early days as a Republic and received a grant of 640 acres of land. He and his brother, Josiah, who arrived in 1836, settled along the Trinity River in what is now Dallas County. The . . . Map (db m153615) HM
219 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cedar Crest — 16725 — Overton Cemetery
The Overton Cemetery is located near the site of William Perry Overton's home, built in 1853-54, on land originally a portion of the Dugold MacFarland survey No. 985 of 1280 acres. MacFarland received the bounty land from the Republic of Texas for . . . Map (db m162127) HM
220 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cedar Crest — 18318 — Tenth Street Historic District Freedman's Town
The first African Americans to live in Oak Cliff were slaves, brought here by settlers such as William H. Hord in 1845 to work the land. The neighborhood that grew here became known as the Tenth Street District. An important African American enclave . . . Map (db m98058) HM
221 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cedars — 6600 — Browder Springs
Named for Browder family originally owning this site. Springs played key role in founding of Dallas and were principal source of water before a pumping system with city mains was installed. During drouth of 1909-10, springs were reopened to supply . . . Map (db m165152) HM
222 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cedars — 6650 — Cherokees in Dallas
Ninety Cherokee Indians, led by Chief Bowles, immigrated to this area from Arkansas Territory in 1819, but were driven out 2 years later by hostile Indians who resented the intrusion. Remnants of group signed Treaty of Sept. 29, 1843, agreeing to . . . Map (db m164952) HM
223 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cedars — 6719 — General Richard M. Gano House Reported missing
J. T. Morehead built this dogtrot cabin near Grapevine in Tarrant County in 1854. Later two rooms and a loft were added and the logs covered with siding. In 1857 the property was sold to R. M. Gano (1830 - 1913), a doctor, minister, and Confederate . . . Map (db m165563) HM
224 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cedars — 6787 — Miller Log Cabin
Built 1847 of cedar logs hewn by hand adzes, pegged in place and caulked with clay. Floored with hand-hewn cedar boards. Chimney stones were quarried near Mountain Creek. First Texas home of Wm. B. Miller (1807 - 1899), who built ante-bellum . . . Map (db m165200) HM
225 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cedars — 6788 — Millermore
William Brown Miller (1807 - 1899) moved from Missouri to Texas in 1847 with his family. In 1855-62 he built this house on his farm east of Dallas. His twelfth child, Minerva (1865 - 1960), inherited the house and named it Millermore. Her husband, . . . Map (db m165331) HM
226 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cedars — 6808 — Old City Park
Indian tribes were once attracted to this park site by a series of natural springs, which became known as Browder Springs after Edward C. Browder (1825 - 1875) acquired the property in 1845. The springs figured in legislation which made Dallas the . . . Map (db m164944) HM
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227 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cedars — 21 — Votes for WomenRoad to the 19th Amendment — National Votes for Women Trail —
Nona Mahoney, Dallas Suffrage leader, gained Rep. Barry Miller's support of suffrage by obtaining 10,000 women's signatures on 1918 petitionMap (db m224029) HM
228 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Cityplace — 14628 — North Dallas High School
The city's fifth high school opened in 1922 on the far north edge of Dallas. At the time, there were three high schools for Caucasian students (Bryan Street, Oak Cliff and Forest) and one for African Americans (Booker T. Washington). The school . . . Map (db m148928) HM
229 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 22824 — 1910 Lynching of Allen Brooks
After Reconstruction, white southerners began adopting laws and codes, known as Jim Crow laws or black codes, that affected everyday life for African Americans. One instrument of enforcement was the threat of violence as well as actual violence, . . . Map (db m229630) HM
230 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6593 — A. H. Belo Corporation
A.H. Belo Corporation traces its roots to a small company that founded the Galveston "Daily News" on April 11, 1842. The company began publishing the "Texas Almanac" in 1857. Alfred Horatio Belo (1839-1901) bought the company in 1876 and founded . . . Map (db m158273) HM
231 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6592 — A. H. Belo House
Prominent newspaper publisher Alfred Horatio Belo (1839-1901) was born in North Carolina. He attained the rank of colonel in the Confederate army and came to Texas at the close of the Civil War (1861-65). He went to work for the "Galveston News" . . . Map (db m157388) HM
232 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — Abraham ZapruderDealy Plaza — National Historic Landmark —
Dallas dressmaker Abraham Zapruder stood on top of this pedestal (properly called a plinth) with his receptionist, Marilyn Sitzman, standing behind to steady him. He was the only photographer known to have filmed the entire assassination and his . . . Map (db m209040) HM
233 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6585 — Adolphus Hotel
Dallas businessmen persuaded Adolphus Busch (1839-1913), co-founder of the Anheuser Busch Brewing Co., to build the original section of this hotel in 1911-1912. Constructed on the site of the 1880s Dallas City Hall and designed by the St. Louis . . . Map (db m157862) HM
234 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6654 — Alexander Cockrell / Sarah Horton Cockrell(June 8, 1820 - April 3, 1858) / (Jan. 13, 1819 - April 26, 1892)
Alexander Cockrell came to Dallas area in 1845. After serving in the war with Mexico (1846-47), he filed on 640 acres in the Peters Colony, and married Sarah Horton on Sept. 9, 1847. Cockrell operated a freight line to Houston, Jefferson, and . . . Map (db m157958) HM
235 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 11827 — Alexander Harwood(1820-1885)
Alexander Harwood came to Dallas in 1844 from Tennessee. After the death of his first wife Isabella Daniel Harwood in 1851, he married Sarah Peak in 1855. Harwood was elected county clerk six times between 1850 and 1880. He was senior warden of . . . Map (db m160335) HM
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236 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6890 — Barton Warren Stone(1817-1881)
Kentucky native Barton Warren Stone came to Dallas from Tennessee in 1851. He prospered at farming and the practice of law. In 1852 he helped lead a rebellion against Peters Colony agent H. O. Hedgecoxe. Though initially opposed to Texas' . . . Map (db m159629) HM
237 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6608 — Busch-Kirby Building
Adolphus Busch had this building constructed in 1913 as a complementary retail and office facility for his nearby Adolphus Hotel. It was acquired by the Kirby Investment Company in 1919. Designed by the St. Louis architectural firm of Barnett, . . . Map (db m157445) HM
238 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6649 — Central National Road
During the early days of the Republic of Texas, settlers and pioneers coming from the United States entered Texas by crossing the Red River in Northwest Red River County. On the north side of that crossing was the terminus of a U.S. Military . . . Map (db m28828) HM
239 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6663 — City of Dallas
Pioneer John Neely Bryan (1810 - 1877) settled on the banks of the Trinity River just west of this site in 1841. A town he called Dallas grew up around his cabin. Chosen as county seat four years after the creation of Dallas County in 1846, the . . . Map (db m160234) HM
240 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6666 — Dallas County
The unincorporated town of Dallas was designated as a postoffice by the Republic of Texas in 1843. The County of Dallas was created by the first Legislature of Texas on March 30, 1846 from portions of Robertson and Nacogdoches counties. Both city . . . Map (db m158020) HM
241 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6668 — Dallas County Records Building
Designed by the prominent Dallas architectural firm of Lang and Witchell, this Gothic Revival style building was erected in 1927-28 to house Dallas County records, offices, and courtrooms. First known as the Hall of Records, the current name was . . . Map (db m43461) HM
242 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6672 — Dallas Scottish Rite Temple
Samuel P. Cochran (1855 - 1936), a prominent Mason and community leader, headed the committee that initiated plans for this building in 1902. Masonic officials assembled for the cornerstone laying in March 1907 and for the dedication ceremony in . . . Map (db m159898) HM
243 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — Dealey PlazaBirthplace of Dallas
Within this small park was built the first home, which also served as the first courthouse and post office, the first store and the first fraternal lodge. Dedicated to the pioneers of civic progress by order of the Park Board.Map (db m4675) HM
244 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — Dealey Plaza National Historic Landmark
Dealey Plaza has been designated a National Historic Landmark. This site possesses national significance in commemorating the history of the United States of America. 1993, National Park Service - United States Department of the Interior. . . . Map (db m4677) HM
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245 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6689 — First Baptist Church(The First Baptist Church in Dallas)
Organized 1868; first building (1871) on this site was one-room frame structure, which members financed by weaving rugs, making hominy, preserves, and cheese to sell at fairs near Dallas, then a frontier town of 2,500. Section of Victorian-style, . . . Map (db m157484) HM
246 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 15464 — First Juries to Sit Women in Dallas County
Although the ratification of the 19th amendment to the U.S. Constitution granted women the right to vote in 1920, women were not permitted to serve on juries in Texas until 1954. Efforts to add women to jury lists began soon after passage of the . . . Map (db m157921) HM
247 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 11824 — First United Methodist Church of Dallas
Methodism in Dallas traces its roots to as early as 1846, when the small village was a stopping point for Methodist circuit riders. The first organized group of Methodists met in November 1850, and continued for almost 20 years without a building of . . . Map (db m135399) HM
248 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6895 — Formerly The Texas School Book Depository Building
This site was originally owned by John Neely Bryan, the founder of Dallas. During the 1880s French native Maxime Guillot operated a wagon shop here. In 1894 the land was purchased by Phil L. Mitchell, President and Director of Rock Island Plow . . . Map (db m4661) HM
249 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6734 — Higginbotham-Bailey Building
Designed by the noted Dallas architectural firm of Lang and Witchell, this building was constructed to house the dry goods manufacturing and distributing business of the Higginbotham - Bailey - Logan Co. (known as Higginbotham - Bailey after . . . Map (db m157826) HM
250 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6735 — Higginbotham-Pearlstone Building
Constructed in 1909, this building was first occupied in 1910 by the Hobson Electric company. The warehouse was next leased to the Maroney Hardware Company, which was bought in 1926 by Rufus W. Higginbotham and Hyman Pearlstone, owners of the . . . Map (db m166665) HM
251 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6739 — Hilton Hotel
Designed by the architectural firm of Lang and Witchell, this hotel was built in 1925 for Conrad Hilton, and was the first to bear the Hilton name. The hotel advertised comfortable guest rooms and superior service at moderate prices. The . . . Map (db m138148) HM
252 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6835 — James K. Polk Record(Oct. 29, 1834 - Jan. 16, 1872)
Educated in Tennessee as a lawyer, J. K. P. Record became the District Attorney for Dallas in 1860. He left that office to serve in the Confederate Army during the Civil War, but returned here after the conflict. In 1866 he became a state senator . . . Map (db m159805) HM
253 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 11834 — James Martin Patterson(1812 - 1906)
Kentucky native James Martin Patterson arrived in Dallas in 1846. Patterson and John W. Smith opened one of the first stores in Dallas using their pooled resources of $700. They built a flatboat and attempted to ship cotton down the Trinity River . . . Map (db m159717) HM
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254 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6757 — James W. (Weck) Latimer(1783 - 1860)
Latimer was born in New London, Conn. Moved to Texas, with family, in 1833. Founder and editor first newspaper in Dallas, 1849. Known originally as "The Cedar Snag" then as "Dallas Herald." Incorporated into "Dallas Morning News" in 1885. . . . Map (db m159706) HM
255 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — John F. Kennedy Memorial Plaza Reported permanently removed
President John Fitzgerald Kennedy (1917-1963) was assassinated in Dallas, Texas on November 22, 1963. This event changed the city – and the world – forever. As a tribute to this extraordinary man, John F. Kennedy Memorial Plaza was dedicated on . . . Map (db m4672) HM
256 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — John F. Kennedy Memorial Plaza
President John Fitzgerald Kennedy (1917-1963) was assassinated in Dallas, two hundred yards from this location, on November 22, 1963. This event changed the city-and the world-forever. Dedicated on June 24, 1970, the John F. Kennedy Memorial . . . Map (db m244629) HM
257 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 11825 — John Jay Good(1827-1882)
Mississippi native John Jay Good practiced law in Alabama before moving to Dallas in 1851. He married Susan Anna Floyd in 1854. Good was involved in early local and state government and was a charter member of the local Odd Fellows' Lodge in 1855. . . . Map (db m159866) HM
258 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6661 — John McClannahan Crockett(December 26, 1816 - August 4, 1887)
South Carolina native John M. Crockett married Katherine (Kate) Polk in 1837. In 1848 they moved to Dallas where Crockett opened one of the pioneer settlement's first law offices. Crockett served as a State Legislator, Mayor of Dallas, and . . . Map (db m159719) HM
259 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6605 — John Neely Bryan and Margaret Beeman Bryan1810–1877 and 1825–1919
In 1839 Tennessee lawyer John Neely Bryan chose this high bluff and shallow ford on the Trinity River as site for a trading post. Finding Indians scarce when he returned in 1844, he platted a town, installed a ferry, and called the place . . . Map (db m24929) HM
260 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 13055 — John W. Lane
Kentucky native John W. Lane (1835-1888) was a member of Tannehill Lodge No. 52 AF&AM. Trained as a printer, he came to Dallas in 1859 and worked for the Dallas Herald newspaper. He married Elizabeth Crutchfield in 1860 and the next year joined . . . Map (db m160398) HM
261 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6714 — Juliette Abbey Peak Fowler(May 8, 1837 - June 4, 1889)
After the deaths of her husband and children in the early 1860s, Juliette Peak Fowler lived in Dallas and was active in local charitable causes. Committed to orphans and elderly women during her life, she provided for their benevolent care in her . . . Map (db m159599) HM
262 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6740 — Karl St. John Hoblitzelle(October 22, 1879 - March 8, 1967)
A young Missourian, Karl Hoblitzelle in 1904 helped produce the St. Louis World's Fair, where he gained respect for vaudeville. In 1905 he founded Interstate Amusement Company and opened theatres in Dallas, Fort Worth, Waco, and San Antonio. Soon . . . Map (db m135772) HM
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263 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — Kennedy Assassination Route
On November 22, 1963, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, thirty-fifth President of the United States, visited Dallas. A Presidential parade traveled north on Houston Street to Elm Street and west on Elm Street. As the parade continued on Elm Street at 12:30 . . . Map (db m4660) HM
264 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6775 — Log Cabin Pioneers of Dallas County
Most colonists first settled in this "Three Forks" area of the Trinity River as members of the Peters Colony after 1841. Immigrants from such states as Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, and Tennessee brought with them a tradition of building . . . Map (db m43436) HM
265 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6779 — Majestic Theatre
In his determination to provide entertainment for the entire family, theatre pioneer and innovator Karl St. John Hoblitzelle (1879-1967) built this structure in 1921 to house Dallas' Majestic Theatre. The five-story, five-bay, Beaux Arts structure . . . Map (db m135695) HM
266 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 17060 — Moorland YMCA Building
In 1928, the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) of Dallas recognized a growing need for expanded facilities across the city. In the African American neighborhood of North Dallas, citizens raised $75,000 ($25,000 more than their goal) in . . . Map (db m81308) HM
267 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6797 — Neiman-Marcus
In 1907 Herbert Marcus, Sr., his sister Carrie Marcus Neiman and her husband A. L. Neiman founded the prestigious Neiman-Marcus retail establishment. After the firm's first store at Elm and Murphy streets burned in 1913, a new store was . . . Map (db m157623) HM
268 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6677 — Nicholas Henry Darnell(April 20, 1807 - June 7, 1885)
Soon after arriving in Texas in 1838, Nicholas Darnell was elected to the Republic of Texas Congress, where he served as Speaker of the House. A delegate to the 1845 Statehood Convention, he later represented Dallas and Tarrant counties in the . . . Map (db m159598) HM
269 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6662 — Old Cumberland Hill School
One of the first brick schools in Dallas system, this Victorian building was constructed in 1888 on the site of a pre-Civil War school organized by Cumberland Presbyterian Church of Dallas. In early decades this school drew pupils from several . . . Map (db m157350) HM
270 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6798 — Original Site of Neiman-Marcus
On September 10, 1907, the first Neiman-Marcus store opened at this site. Established by Herbert Marcus, Sr., his sister Carrie Marcus Neiman and her husband A.L. Neiman, it was founded on the principles of innovative marketing concepts and . . . Map (db m157394) HM
271 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 13176 — Pierre Dusseau
Pierre Dusseau (1800-1867) was born in Carcassone, in southern France. With a strong interest in the science of gardening, he joined the European American Society of Colonization in 1854 and set out for Texas to be the gardener for Victor Prosper . . . Map (db m159596) HM
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272 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6818 — Pioneer Cemetery
The area now known as Pioneer Cemetery is composed of the remnants of four early graveyards. The graves, dating from the 1850s, include many of Dallas' early settlers and civic leaders. Two of the graveyards that now make up Pioneer Cemetery . . . Map (db m159652) HM
273 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6697 — Site of First Ferry and Bridge — (about 300 feet West) —
First ferry on the Trinity River at Dallas was started here, 1842, by John Neely Bryan (1810 - 1877), the founder of Dallas. Alexander Cockrell (1820 - 1858), early builder and developer, replaced ferry with wooden toll bridge, 1854. This crossing . . . Map (db m43435) HM
274 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6875 — Site of Sanger Brothers Department Store
The first Sanger Brothers Department Store in Dallas opened in 1872 in rented space on the courthouse square. Earliest Sanger Bros. stores in railroad towns such as Bryan, Calvert, and Corsicana soon were closed. In Dallas the five German Sanger . . . Map (db m157819) HM
275 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 17802 — St. Paul United Methodist Church
In 1873, several inhabitants of Freedman's Town, a community of recently freed people just north of the Dallas city limits, met with Methodist Ministers Rev. H. Oliver and Rev. William Bush under a brush arbor to organize the area's first African . . . Map (db m80034) HM
276 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6671 — The Dallas Morning News
On Oct. 1, 1885, "The Dallas Morning News" began publication as the North Texas extension of A. H. Belo's "Galveston News." The two publications were linked by telegraph to exchange information, and they maintained a statewide network of . . . Map (db m158286) HM
277 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6673 — The Dallas Symphony
Early efforts to establish a symphony orchestra in Dallas began in 1899 with the formation of the Dallas Symphony Club. It was a short-lived effort, but in 1911 the city's first professional orchestra was established under the Dallas Symphony . . . Map (db m135505) HM
278 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — The Grassy Knoll
Journalist Merriman Smith, riding in the motorcade five cars behind President Kennedy reported seeing Dallas Police run up this hill, which he called a grassy knoll. Some witnesses believed shots came from the knoll area, but police found no . . . Map (db m116916) HM
279 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6778 — The Magnolia (Mobil) Building
Erected in 1921-22, this building housed the offices of Magnolia Petroleum Co., later Mobil Oil Co. It was designed by Sir Alfred C. Bossom (1881 - 1965), noted British architect, and built at a cost of $4 million. The tallest structure in Dallas . . . Map (db m157855) HM
280 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6811 — The Old Red Courthouse
Designated as public land in John Neely Bryan's 1844 city plat, this was the site of a log courthouse built after Dallas County was created in 1846. When Dallas won election as permanent county seat in 1850, Bryan deeded the property to the county, . . . Map (db m157874) HM
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281 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 11828 — Trezevant Calhoun Hawpe(September 16, 1820-August 12, 1863)
Georgia native Trezevant Calhoun Hawpe, a widower, moved from Tennessee to Dallas County with his son. He married Electa Underwood Bethurum in 1848. Elected Dallas County sheriff in 1850, he served two terms. He later was justice of the peace and . . . Map (db m159784) HM
282 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 6908 — Union Station
By the early 1900s, Dallas needed a single rail terminal for the numerous railroads serving the city. In 1912 seven rail lines formed the Union Terminal Co. They hired Chicago architect Jarvis Hunt, who designed this Neo-classical building with an . . . Map (db m157823) HM
283 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — Welcome to Dealey Plaza
This is Dealey Plaza, known as "The Front Door of Dallas” since its dedication in 1936 but remembered today as the assassination site of President John F. Kennedy in 1963. Dealey Plaza was the end of the presidential motorcade prior to . . . Map (db m208925) HM
284 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Dallas Downtown Historic District — 15814 — Women's Suffrage in Dallas County
The first organized effort on behalf of women's suffrage in Texas occurred in May 1893, when the Texas Equal Rights Association (T.E.R.A.), later known as the League of Women Voters of Texas, was formed at a convention held at Dallas' Windsor . . . Map (db m157871) HM
285 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Design District — Propeller From The RMS Lusitania
This 17-ton propeller was recovered from the RMS Lusitania, which was sunk by a German U-boat submarine in 1915. The Lusitania was a British ocean liner built in 1906 and operated by the Conard Line. The ship entered passenger service in August . . . Map (db m117031) HM
286 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Far North Dallas — 6693 — First Baptist Church of Renner
Renner Baptists organized in 1890 and met in the school building for eight years. Charter members were: B. F. and Kate E. Binkley; Elizabeth H., J. J., Mary A., and R. F. Butler; Mary E. and P. W. Collier; Mary L. Dickerson; George B., J. P. and . . . Map (db m148772) HM
287 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Far North Dallas — 18811 — Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church
In the early 20th Century, unrest and subsequent regional turmoil in Greece forced hundreds of thousands of Greeks to leave their homes, often for America. A year after the Hermes Society, a Greek-American Benevolent Society, was formed, the . . . Map (db m148749) HM
288 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Far North Dallas — 6790 — Mount Calvary Cemetery
Pioneer settlers used this site for burials as early as the 1840s. The oldest known grave is that of Amanda L. Houx (1829-1847). In 1868 William Huffhines donated a two-acre tract, which included the early graves, to Mount Calvary Baptist Church. A . . . Map (db m93134) HM
289 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Far North Dallas — Mount Pisgah Missionary Baptist Church
Mount Pisgah Missionary Baptist Church, affectionately known as “The Rock,” and established in 1864, is the oldest African American Church in Dallas County. The church was named for the mountain peak from which Moses viewed the . . . Map (db m155810) HM
290 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Forest Hills — 6912 — Warren Angus Ferris Cemetery
New York native Warren Angus Ferris (1810 - 1873) spent six years as a trapper and chronicler of the American West before moving to the Republic of Texas in late 1836. As official surveyor for Nacogdoches County he surveyed the Three Forks of the . . . Map (db m151485) HM
291 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Joppa — 18211 — Joppee Community
Located on the banks of the Trinity River, near the Great Trinity Forest, the community of Joppee is one of the few remaining freedman towns in Texas. Following emancipation, freed slaves from the nearby Miller Plantation established their own . . . Map (db m162329) HM
292 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Kessler — 6904 — Trinity Presbyterian Church, USA
Beginning as a Sunday School in the late 1880s, this congregation was formally organized in 1890 as Oak Cliff Cumberland Presbyterian Church under the leadership of the Rev. Daniel G. Molloy. Charter members included many pioneer Dallas families. . . . Map (db m152571) HM
293 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Knox / Henderson — 17709 — Charles Dilbeck Homes in Cochran Heights
Charles Stevens Dilbeck (1907-1990) was the son of a builder and lumberman. He grew up in Fort Smith, Arkansas and Tulsa, Oklahoma, learning his trade from his father. He legendarily designed and built his first project, a Tulsa church, at age . . . Map (db m159079) HM
294 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Lake Cliff Historic District — 6843 — Frank Reaugh
Artist Frank Reaugh (1860-1945), who immortalized the Texas longhorn, began sketching and studying his favorite subject in 1876 when he and his parents, George W. and Clarinda Reaugh, moved from Illinois to Kaufman County. He studied art in St. . . . Map (db m152520) HM
295 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Lake Cliff Historic District — 18223 — Samuel David Dealey, Jr.Commander, United States Navy
Samuel David Dealey, Jr., born on September 13, 1906, to Samuel David and Virgie Downing Dealey of Dallas, became one of the most audacious and successful submariners in the navy serving in the pacific during World War II. After his father died in . . . Map (db m152515) HM
296 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Lake Highlands — 13448 — Highland Oaks Church of Christ
On August 6, 1885, a group came together in the small community of Dallas and formed a Christian Church congregation. The group consisted of the families of John Higgs Cole, Benjamin Franklin Hall, William Henry Ford, William Brown Miller, . . . Map (db m151558) HM
297 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Lake Highlands — 14881 — Lake Highlands Elementary School
Opening in 1955, Lake Highlands Elementary School has served this area for more than 50 years. Prior to 1955, public education in the area was limited to Little Egypt School for black students and Rogers School, which closed in 1929 when it was . . . Map (db m151559) HM
298 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Lake Highlands — 20076 — Little Egypt
The rural settlement of Little Egypt began when former slave Jeff Hill bought a tract of approximately thirty acres of land across Thurgood Lane from this marker in 1883. By the 1920s, the Egypt Chapel Baptist Church and a one-room school had been . . . Map (db m243585) HM
299 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Lake Highlands — 6782 — McCree Cemetery
The first land for this cemetery was granted by Mahulda Bonner McCree in 1866. At least two burials, for John Henry Jones (d. 1862) and Elizabeth McCullough (d. 1864), occurred before the graveyard was formally deeded. Over the years, the cemetery . . . Map (db m107099) HM
300 Texas, Dallas County, Dallas, Lakewood — 12416 — Cox Cemetery
A reflection of the pioneer heritage in this part of Dallas County, Cox Cemetery contains more than 400 marked graves and an estimated 100 unmarked burials. The oldest tombstone dates to 1848 and marks the grave of Margaret Frances Dixon, the . . . Map (db m151481) HM

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Jun. 16, 2024