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Category: History

Sainthood for a Native Born American

An article in the Dallas Morning News dated January 28, 2000, had a headline of “Pope clears sainthood path for native born American.”  There is more to this than was stated in the article from the Washington Post.  In 1992 while researching the files about Freedmans Cemetery on Central Expressway, the following information was found in the…
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Hunnicutt School, Oldest School in DISD

by Kathy Ann Reid, 1/23/2020 William Cunningham (W. C.) Hunnicutt (1818-1868) and wife, Nancy Beeman Hunnicutt (1821-1914), started Hunnicutt’s School in 1856. The exact location is unknown, but it is assumed to have been on Hunnicutt land. The current location at 2444 Telegraph Ave., Dallas, Texas, is near Hunnicut Road and not far from W.…
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Ross Avenue

The city had expanded the limits in 1890 and Ross Avenue, first named Carondelet, was one of the more choice places to live in Dallas. It was one of the first streets in Dallas that was paved, which was a new process. Macadam paving was first used in 1885 and Ross Avenue between Ervay and…
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1856 Tornado

From: History of Dallas County Texas, 1837 to 1887 by John Henry Brown.  The locally famous cyclone struck Cedar Hill, eighteen miles southwesterly from Dallas, April 29, 1856. Mr. Dickson, a merchant, James Berry and family, Mr. Hart and family, and perhaps others were killed. Mrs. Merrifield and children escaped almost miraculously, the house being lifted…
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The Ayers Family in Dallas

From Proud Heritage, Volume III by DCPA. This 352 page hardcover book is available online. In the middle of the nineteenth century, Simpson G. Ayers was a cotton farmer in Tippah County, Mississippi.  Little is known about Simpson Ayers, other than he was the father of twenty or more children by two wives. Among Simpson’s children was William R.,…
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Family Of John Byron And Sarah (Thompson) May

From Proud Heritage, Volume III by DCPA. This 352 page hardcover book is available online. Favorite memories of my childhood, when we lived at 4654 McKinney Avenue, were the times my mother, Annie Marion, loaded her five children (John Ray, Faye, Robert, Ida Lea, and Dulcie Anne) and her mother, Allie Cox, into her 1929 Nash and…
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Donald Huffhines (1929-2000)

From Proud Heritage, Volume III by DCPA. This 352 page hardcover book is available online. Donald F. Huffhines was born December 9, 1929, and died November 18, 2000. During World War II his father, J.C., worked as a government inspector for Guiberson Motors, the company holding the contract for installing motors in tanks for the U.S. Army.…
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Marie Buhrer Gracey

From Proud Heritage, Volume III by DCPA. This 352 page hardcover book is available online. Marie Buhrer was one of nine children born to Jacob Buhrer (b. 1855) and Anna (Hinterman) Buhrer (b. 1854). Their house was a white two-story home on 200 acres on the west bank of White Rock Creek. The family attended St. Paul’s…
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Fred and Myrtle Spainhouer

From Proud Heritage, Volume III by DCPA. This 352 page hardcover book is available online. Fred Braden Spainhouer was born September 16, 1889 in Russellville, Arkansas. He was the son of Aaron and Emma Pittman Spainhouer, both of whom are buried at Cottonwood Cemetery. Myrtle Viola Houston was born in the community of Elm Grove on April…
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G. W. Foster, Sr.

From Proud Heritage, Volume III by DCPA. This 352 page hardcover book is available online. George Washington “Dub” Foster, Sr. was born May 23, 1917 on his family’s farm at Liberty Grove in northeastern Dallas County. His grandfather, George Washington Forster, was seriously ill at the time and Dub wasn’t named until after his grandfather’s death, which…
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