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Tag: history

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Happy 150th Anniversary, DCPA

This year marks our 150th anniversary Join us in celebrating this incredible milestone! We’re hosting a special anniversary celebration on Sunday, October 19, 2025. Forward-thinking organizations can join us as partners in preserving Dallas’s legacy. Discover sponsorship opportunities that connect your brand with our storied past. Back in 1875, as railroad engines thundered across the…
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Association of the Soldiers of the Texas Revolution and Mexican War (1875)

Transcribed from the Dallas Weekly Herald issue of August 28, 1875: Get future posts by email.

Wilson Building

The Wilson Building, located at 1623 Main Street, is one of the most beautiful structures still standing in downtown Dallas. It was built in 1903 by John B. Wilson. The building was designed by the firm of Sanguinet & Staats, a large firm out of Fort Worth. Carl Staats of that firm was the designer…
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W. H. Flippen: From Ross to Greenwood

By Brian Gunn When W. H. Flippen arrived in Dallas in 1880, he quickly became a force in the city’s financial landscape. Teaming up with French emigrant J. Bertrand Adoue and Galveston banker Joseph Lobit, Flippen cofounded the banking firm of Flippen, Adoue & Lobit. The trio commissioned noted architect James Flanders to design their…
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Freedmen’s Towns in Dallas County

The Freedmens town movement involved the establishment of communities by formerly enslaved African Americans in the United States, mostly organized after the Civil War and emancipation in 1865. These settlements, often called “Freedmen’s Towns” or “Freedom Colonies,” were created as areas where African Americans could live independently, build self-sufficient communities, and exercise newfound independence away…
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Greenwood Cemetery

The cemetery at this location was originally chartered in 1874 as Trinity Cemetery by William H. Gaston, W. H. Thomas and A. W. Morton. Gaston and Thomas were local banking partners and Morton was a Dallas undertaker. At the time, it was a little out of town just off the old McKinney Road. The area…
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Freedmen’s Towns

The Freedmen’s town movement involved the establishment of communities by formerly enslaved African Americans in the United States, mostly organized after the Civil War and emancipation in 1865. These settlements, often called “Freedmen’s Towns” or “Freedom Colonies,” were created as areas where African Americans could live independently, build self sufficient communities, and exercise newfound independence…
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Recent Cemetery Visits

All photos below by Dustin Durrett El Campo Santo de Cemento de la Compania Trinity Portland: Horton Family Cemetery: Mooneyham Sparkman Cemetery: Robinson Family Cemetery: Get future posts by email.

Pleasant Ridge Cemetery

By Frances James (1922 – 2019) The Pleasant Ridge Cemetery is located high on a hill north of Barnes Bridge at the intersection with Belt Line Road in Sunnyvale. The cemetery also known as the New Hope Cemetery is a small parcel of the Peters Colony six hundred and forty acre Survey Number 696 that…
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WPA Listing of Dallas Street Names

List of street names, from “The WPA Dallas Guide And History” (1) [Note: Some of these items are at variance with more current opinions regarding the origin of the named street.] Adolph –  For Adolph Frick, one of the Swiss Colony. Adair – For Dr. W. W. Adair, early physician and landowner. Akard – For…
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