Downtown Dallas in Color — 1940s & 1950s
by Paula Bosse
Colorful Commerce St. (via trolleydodger.com)
by Paula Bosse
After seeing so many pictures of historic downtown Dallas in black and white, it’s pretty thrilling to see color photos — even better, super-saturated Kodachrome slides. Here are a few.
Above, a photo taken on July 31, 1950: a view of Commerce Street, taken from Lamar looking east. I LOVE this photo! Sadly, I really don’t love what this same block looks like today: brace yourselves — click here! (For reference, Padgitt Bros. was at 1018 Commerce.)
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Below, a photo from 1954: the 300 block of N. Ervay, taken from Bryan looking southeast toward Pacific. The Republic Bank Building (at the left) is still there, but those buildings on the right? Gone, gone, gone. That space is now taken up with Thanksgiving Square. I may be in the minority, but I would rather have those buildings back. That crazy-looking building housing businesses such as Arcadia Liquor (309 N. Ervay)? I have been all-but-obsessed with that weird building for years. Personally, I prefer its bizarro architecture to that of Philip Johnson. See what this block looks like now, here.
via Shorpy.com
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Below, from 1950: Main Street, looking east toward St. Paul (and Titche’s). This is fantastic! The view now is here.
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Another great photo from the collection of Noah Jeppson (seriously, check out his Flickr stream here!), this is one I’ve posted before — everyone posts this because it’s such an amazing photo, from 1945 (!): Elm Street, looking east from the 1400 block. See it today, here.
via Noah Jeppson
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Despite the watermark, this is a cool September, 1940 view of the gas station/service station which once held down the Preston Road entrance to Highland Park Village: looking northwesterly toward Mockingbird. The view today is here.
via eBay
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Another downtown view, this one showing the Walgreens at Commerce & Akard (at the Adolphus Hotel); the view is looking north up Akard (see it today here).
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If you’ve got color photos/slides from this era, I’d love to see them!
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Sources & Notes
Links to all sources can be found beneath the photos.
Special shout-out to Michael T. Jackson (@memj83) for tagging me on Twitter to a post by @Kodakforever — a heart-stoppingly great collection of Kodachrome photos where I first saw a few of the photos posted above.
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Copyright © 2021 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.
Really nice pics Paula.
I’ve been trying to find a pic of Elm Street
in the 70’s. There was 3 movie theaters
The Tower, the Capri, and the Majestic.
All on the same side of the street.
I can’t find it
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Thanks, Pamela. Not from the ’70s, but all three are in this photo from 1967: https://flashbackdallas.com/2015/08/06/tower-theater-1967/
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Paula,
What a treat to see those pictures. A real blast from the past for me.
Thank you.
K
“Most people are about as happy as they decide to be.”
Abraham Lincoln
>
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Thanks, K!
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Love the pics of MY town, Paula. I get so nostalgic about how it was back then.
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Thank you Paula – for the comparison shots. If I were to be able to “walk into” one picture or the other… inevitably the 1940/50s version of the pictures shows what I consider to be a much more interesting world… more small funky places with people doing interesting and creative things. Used to love going downtown – Titche’s Neiman’s Sangar’s – and the newsstands had *every comic* imaginable… also went to the Highland Park Village occasionally… but my mom was usually pigeonholed in Mrs. Northcutt’s shop or someplace *boring* (to a squirrely grade school boy anyway).
Keep up the good work!
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Thanks, Bill!
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Wow! Thank you so much Paula and also Noah, love these
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Paula, great post but I’m wondering if this could be the Douglas side of Highland Park Village?
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Thanks, Gigi. It’s Preston. See the photo in this post: https://flashbackdallas.com/2017/12/21/highland-park-village-from-above/
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I still remember that great downtown smell. The electricity smell from the streetcars and the fumes from all of the cars was a smell we didn’t have way out in the sticks. (Northwest Hwy & Marsh).
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Kodachrome had only been around for a few years when the photo from 1940 was taken and wasn’t really mainstream until the 60s so seeing some from the 40s and 50s is always a treat. Thanks!
The Spanish style building on Ervay in the photo from Shorpy was the Durham Building built in 1930:
Took me awhile to figure out that the structure visible in the background of that photo between the Wilson Building Annex and the Praetorian Building was the cooling tower for the Palace Theatre air conditioning system which was added to the theater in 1924:
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Thanks for the info on both, especially the Durham Building (in the “extreme Spanish” style)!
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I love this stuff. Thanks, Paula!
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I love the ladies in their summer dresses downtown for a day of shopping in the Commerce St. photo. Back then we dressed up to go downtown, gloves and all. I was also struck by a sign on Main in 1950. Benno’s Buttons obviously had a decent sized shop back then. It had moved to Lovers and Inwood by 1953, when I first remember going to Community Fabric on the south side of Lovers for the pattern and fabric and across the street to Mrs. Benno’s for buttons and appliques. Mark Benno went to Hillcrest and recorded an LP for Leon Russell’s Shelter label in the early 70’s.
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Interesting Benno’s tidbits! Thanks, Victoria!
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Paula, Yes, I see now. I think I was remembering photos I’ve seen where the gas station on Preston Had a 2nd story? I love your column… You do such a great job! Thank you.
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[…] The photo above, from 1950, is probably my favorite of the year. Kodachrome slides make everything 10 times better. It’s a great, nostalgic, lively, perfect photo, showing Commerce Street looking east from Lamar. It will shock you to see what this exact same view looks like today, which you can take a look at — if you dare — in the original post, “Downtown Dallas in Color — 1940s & 1950s.” […]
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I’m with you, I moved her in 1984 back when the Lancer’s Club was still open and in the old LTV tower and there were a lot of businesses with recessed doorways. I miss the downtown of old. Too many buildings have been torn down in the name of “progress”
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