Flashback : Dallas

A Miscellany: History, Ads, Pop Culture

Category: Downtown

The Triple Underpass — Elm, Main, and Commerce Never Looked Better

triple_underpass_1936

by Paula Bosse

Sometimes a noisy, bustling metropolis really hits the spot, but there are times I long to have completely empty streets all to myself. Which is one reason I love this serene and peaceful (or perhaps “post-apocalyptic,” depending on your half-full/half-empty world-view) scene of Dallas, totally deserted save for a partial view of a single car in the distance. The brand new “triple underpass” was unveiled in 1936, the year Dallas was obsessed with showing off what a fantastically modern city it was to the throngs of visitors flooding in for the Texas Centennial celebrations. G.B. Dealey himself rode the first car through the underpass. Perhaps that’s his little car heading up Main Street.

triple-underpasss_wo-dealey_1930s
Above, the “Business District, from the West.” Note the absence of Dealey Plaza, which wouldn’t be completed until 1941 and not officially named “Dealey Plaza” until 1946. …After that, the place wasn’t thought about in any especially significant way until 1963.

triple-underpass_gateway-to-dallas_1940s

“The Gateway to Dallas, Texas,” with beautiful Dealey Plaza now set in place, one day to become the most-visited historic site in the city. Despite its grim connection to the assassination, every time I drive through that underpass I always get a little thrill. Almost 80 years after it became a landmark, the triple underpass is still a remarkably cool piece of Dallas architecture and engineering.

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Copyright © 2014 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

Bird’s Eye View of Dallas — circa 1900

birdseye_view_dallas_postcard
by Paula Bosse

Wonderful old postcard, looking east, probably from the courthouse. Main Street is on the left, Commerce on the right. I’m not sure of the date, but I’m guessing somewhere around the turn of the century. Click the picture for a very large image, and just wander around the place.

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Copyright © 2014 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

Downtown Snowfall — January 10, 1962

Downtown Dallas TexasPhoto by Ferd Kaufman/AP (click for larger image)

by Paula Bosse

It snowed today in Dallas! It’s pretty, but not as pretty as this 1962 night-time view of Commerce and Akard (looking west). Even the approaching slush looks sophisticated in glamorous black-and-white.

(See a fantastic color photo from 1957 showing the northwest corner of the Adolphus block with that incredible Walgreen neon sign in full view, taken from the front of the Baker Hotel, here.)

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Copyright © 2014 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

 

Prohibition Killjoys

still_confiscation

Stills stilled

By Paula Bosse

Oh dear.

A quote from Michael V. Hazel, from his book Remembering Dallas:

A national magazine described Dallas as “one of the wettest cities in the nation” during Prohibition, with more than its share of speakeasies and bootleg liquor. Sheriff Dan Harston and his deputies kept busy confiscating stills.

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Sources & Notes

Quote and photo from Remembering Dallas by Michael V. Hazel (Turner Publishing, 2010). Wonky image is completely my fault.

Dallas’ Film Row — 1918

dallas_movie-palaces_1918Looking east from Elm and Akard… (click for larger image)

by Paula Bosse

A 1918 photograph of Elm Street taken at the corner of Akard, looking east, showing the old Queen Theater (later the Leo; torn down to build the Dallas Federal Savings and Loan Building), the Jefferson Theater, and the Old Mill Theater.

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Copyright © 2014 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

 

Dallas Skyline by Alfred Eisenstaedt — 1940s

dallas_skyline_eisenstaedt_1943_large(click for very large image)

by Paula Bosse

The Dallas skyline, photographed by Alfred Eisenstaedt in the 1940s for Life magazine (as far as I can tell, it was not published). One of my favorite views of downtown, from the Cedars, back when Pegasus was still visible.

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Copyright © 2014 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.