Flashback : Dallas

A Miscellany: History, Ads, Pop Culture

Flashback Newsflash: Working at the Library

“Central Research Library”

by Paula Bosse

I have news: I am now working on the Dallas History and Archives floor at the downtown Dallas Public Library! I am surrounded by so many interesting things every day that it’s hard not to be distracted by all the photos, maps, books, manuscript collections, etc. Cool stuff everywhere. And great co-workers!

I might as well take this opportunity to share a few tidbits about the building (at 1515 Young Street, facing City Hall).

As you can see from the 3-D architectural model above (the model is on permanent display on the 7th floor), the library was originally referred to as “Central Research Library” when it opened in April 1982 (it was later renamed the J. Erik Jonsson Central Library, in honor of the former mayor). I’m not sure I knew that. Here’s another photo, showing the Wood Street side of the model:

When this library opened, it was the only major library (in the world, I think) that had its entire collection cataloged electronically. Bye-bye to card catalog files and their cute little drawers and hello to desktop computers, 50 of which were donated by Texas Instruments (Erik Jonsson was a founder of T.I.). These were for use by patrons, and, for many of them, these computers were their first experience with a personal computer.

Here is another interesting factoid from a Dallas Morning News article touting the new library’s innovations:

Special exhibits are housed in rooms protected by halon gas, an oxygen-consuming gas that will be released if a fire breaks out, removing all the oxygen and starving the fire. (DMN, April 18, 1982)

The architects were Fisher & Spillman, and they designed the building to be something of a stylistically sympathetic companion to I. M. Pei’s City Hall right across the street. This is the view of it I see every day (and, yes, I think of RoboCop every day):

I can’t believe this building — which I still think of being fairly “new” — is 42 years old. Time flies. Read about the journey of this library, from bond proposal to dedication, in a D Magazine article by my co-worker Brandon Murray, here (check out the slideshow).

DPL_architects-drawing_DPL-archives

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I’m very excited about my new job, surrounded by Dallas and Texas history. Much of my childhood was spent in my local library (the Lakewood Branch), and the occasional trip to the downtown library on Commerce Street, which predated the one I now work in, was always something of a magical experience. And now I’m back, just on the other side of the desk.

If you’re ever in the neighborhood, stop by and say hi!

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Sources & Notes

All photos by me, taken in the summer of 2024.

The architectural rendering by Fisher & Spillman is from the Dallas Public Library Archives.

A version of this post appeared on the Flashback Dallas Patreon page.

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Copyright © 2024 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

Labor Day Weekend, 1952 (Redux)

labor-day_083152_denny-hayes_PA76-1-11420-002_webWaiting for the fun to start… (photo: Dallas Public Library)

by Paula Bosse

Happy Labor Day! Back in 2020 I wrote a post called “Labor Day Weekend, Union Bus Depot — 1952.” I really enjoyed writing that one, and I loved the main photo in it. It turns out that the photo I’m using in this post was taken only a couple of minutes before the one I used four years ago. I discovered this photo a few weeks ago and have been waiting for Labor Day to roll around. Which it has now done.

On August 31, 1952, Dallas photographer Denny Hayes took several photos of travelers waiting to be whisked away to someplace else. (With luck, someplace cooler.) These photos were taken at the Union Bus Depot in the Interurban Building. Let’s zoom in on this great people-packed photo.

Everyone and everything pales in comparison to the young woman walking toward the camera. In her left hand she holds a box camera. She’s ready to take fun photos, if she ever gets out of that station.

labor-day_083152_denny-hayes_PA76-1-11420-002_woman

labor-day_083152_denny-hayes_PA76-1-11420-002_woman_camera

labor-day_083152_denny-hayes_PA76-1-11420-002_modern-screen

labor-day_083152_denny-hayes_PA76-1-11420-002_waiting

labor-day_083152_denny-hayes_PA76-1-11420-002_queue

labor-day_083152_denny-hayes_PA76-1-11420-002_father-daughter

(If the man above looked any more like Harvey Korman, he’d be Harvey Korman.)

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If you have the day off, I hope you enjoy it. And if you’re traveling somewhere, I hope you get there quickly!

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Sources & Notes

Photo by Denny Hayes, from the Hayes Collection, Dallas Public Library, Dallas History and Archives; Call Number: PA76-1/11420-002.

See the companion post, “Labor Day Weekend, Union Bus Depot — 1952,” and see how many people made it into both photos.

labor-day_083152_denny-hayes_PA76-1-11420-002_web

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Copyright © 2024 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

Poolside Patrons

patreon_melrose-hotel_swimming-pool_postcard_ebay_photo_william-langleyLounging at the Melrose…

by Paula Bosse

Life is making it difficult for me to get back to a regular posting routine. I never want my mentions of the Flashback Dallas Patreon page to be irritating, but here I am mentioning it again. Even though I’ve been unable to sit down and write anything substantial here for a while, I am posting short things daily on the Patreon page. Become a subscriber for as little as $5 a month and receive these morsels every day in your inbox. Here are the recent offerings:

JULY 2024

  • Lepary Cafe & Grocery, Fair Park Area – 1953
  • I’ll Be at the Library
  • Lone Star (Gas. Co.) Deco
  • Above Highland Park High School – 1962
  • Bird’s-Eye View to the Northeast
  • Happy Motoring at Six Flags!
  • Michel Lime Co., West Dallas
  • Scottish Rite Cathedral
  • “Home of the Mustangs” Seen from a Helicopter
  • Hoffarth Bros.’ Silver King Saloon – ca. 1902
  • First Baptist Church
  • Brick Paving
  • White Rock Airport: “The Most Convenient Airport in Dallas”
  • Aerial View of City Hall Under Construction (1970s)
  • Neiman-Marcus/Camel (Modeling with Exotic Animals)
  • The Swing Club: “Home of the Beef Trust Girls”
  • The 3,000,000th Ford V8 Visits the Centennial – 1936
  • Costumed Staff of the New Majestic – 1921
  • The Attic Fan
  • Frisco Lines Passenger Station – 1911
  • Rutherford’s Veterinary Hospital, Fair Park
  • Town & Country Restaurant, 2016 Commerce
  • Highland Park Methodist Church
  • Meletio Electric Co.
  • Triple Underpass Under Construction
  • Lochwood Center, Garland Rd. & Jupiter – 1955
  • Happy 4th of July!
  • SMU Campus and Beyond – 1945
  • Cowgirls Welcome the Rotarians – 1929
  • Morning Calisthenics at the Rusk School – 1913

JUNE 2024

  • Meet Me at Nickey’s – S. Lamar & Forest
  • “La Rambla” at the Pan American Exposition – 1937
  • Southwest Airmotive, Love Field
  • Buck’s TV & Record Shop (Pleasant Grove) – 1958
  • Lucas B & B, 3520 Oak Lawn
  • Lounging by the Melrose Pool
  • Keating Implement and Machine Co. – 1900
  • Midnight Melody Men – 1925
  • The Arnold House, Old East Dallas
  • Country Club Pharmacy, Inwood Village – 1950
  • “The Honey Hive Silhouette” at Titche’s – 1949
  • Moorland Branch, YMCA
  • Second Ave. Bakery Delivery Team – ca. 1904
  • Second Presbyterian Church – 1905
  • Kessler Park, From the Air – 1920s
  • Oak Lawn Methodist Church
  • Fair Park Midget Auto Races and Pronto Pups
  • The C. Weichsel Co., 1611 Main
  • Vanette Hosiery (Baker-Moise Co.) – 1930s
  • The Rocket
  • Star Lite Rollercade (Harry Hines)
  • Dallas Natatorium and Artesian Baths – 1891
  • Big Hats at the State Fair of Texas – 1908
  • Sewell Village Cars/KVIL – ca. 1960
  • N-M Trinkets for Men: “Oil Man’s Gold” – 1953
  • Baylor, From Above

Previous topics covered by me on Patreon can be found here.

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Sources & Notes

Top image from a Melrose Hotel postcard, found on eBay.

Consider supporting me on Patreon here. You can cancel at any time!

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Copyright © 2024 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

Telesign: Flashing News to Downtown Dallas — 1951

telesign_trusts-and-estates-mag_march-1953_photoAll the news that fits… on a moving sign

by Paula Bosse

Well, this is pretty interesting.

Once upon a time, downtown Dallas had one of those moving “tickertape” electronic news message signs. It debuted on the exterior of the First National Bank (and part of an adjacent building) at Main and Akard on December 11, 1951. It was Dallas’ version of the famous New York Times news-ticker-bulletin sign (“the Zipper”) in Times Square. The sign was comprised of 3,136 light bulbs; the crawling, flashing letters were 30 inches high, and the sign stretched 190 feet, with the moving message bending around the bank building. The “hot news” could be really “hot” — like only minutes old, unlike the NYT sign, which could take hours to get a constantly repeating message up and running. The sign flashed the news to downtown passersby from 7:30 AM until 10:30 PM.

This “traveling-message” sign was the creation of Irving Naxon, of the Naxon Telesign Corporation of Chicago. (Naxon, a prolific inventor, is perhaps best known as the man who introduced the Crock Pot slow cooker to the world.) See the 1929 patent application for his “traveling-message sign” here.

How did it work? Briefly, United Press wire copy received in the WFAA newsroom was punched onto a paper ribbon and then fed into a transmitter. Theoretically, a hot-off-the-wire newsflash could be racing across the Main Street sign in the amount of time it would take to type the message — seconds. (Read more about it the article at the bottom of this post.)

There is silent footage from December 1951 of the Telesign in action, with shots of inventor Irving Naxon demonstrating how his system works: see the WBAP-TV footage on the Portal to Texas History website here. (The accompanying news script is here.)

I don’t know how long this sign was operational, but I have a feeling it wasn’t very long — but at least through 1953. Imagine how frequently those 3,000 light bulbs burned out and had to be replaced! I had never heard of this sign — or seen photos of it — so this was a very interesting little discovery.

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news-scroll_dallas-mag-dec-1951_photo-detDallas magazine, Dec. 1951

A 1953 ad for Federal Signs:

telesign_dallas-mag_jan-1953_advertDallas magazine, Jan. 1953

A couple of screenshots of the sign in action from a Channel 5 news clip (Dec. 12, 1951, Portal to Texas History). The first shows men in hats checking out the new sign as darkness falls:

telesign_screenshot_UNT_dec-12-1951-b

And here’s what they were looking at:

telesign_screenshot_UNT_dec-12-1951UNT Libraries Special Collections

How it worked (click for larger image):

news-scroll_dallas-mag_dec-1951_photoDallas magazine, Dec. 1951

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Excerpts from a couple of trade magazine articles:

The First National Bank in Dallas, Dallas, Texas has recently installed this telesign containing 3,136 individually controlled bulbs which form letters corresponding to those punched on tape as it is fed through a cigar-box size transmitter. Following formal dedication ceremonies, the sign flashed its first message: “UNCENSORED NEWS IS THE BASIS OF FREEDOM.”

The Telesign is operated continuously from 7:30 A.M. to 10:30 P.M., bringing to the people of Dallas, as a public service, news bulletins highlighting the latest developments in the big stories of the day, local, national and international. (Bankers Monthly, Feb. 1952)

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Bank Installs Telesign: The first fast-moving line of words — “UNCENSORED NEWS IS THE BASIS OF FREEDOM: — chasing each other across First National Bank of Dallas’ new sign, echoed the dedicatory statement of President Ben H. Wooten. The telesign is operated as a community service to give downtown crowds a constant flow of news reports. Second in length only to that of the New York Times, it is believed to be the first ever installed by a bank. (Trusts and Estates, March 1953)

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Sources & Notes

Top photo is from Bankers Monthly, Feb. 1952.

More about this can be found in the following article from the Dallas Morning News archives: “Bank Unveils Its New Telesign, Latest Word in News-Flashing” (DMN, Dec. 12, 1951).

In a related vein — as far as giant outdoor news signs downtown — check out the 2016 Flashback Dallas post “How Dallas Used to Get Election Returns.”

telesign_trusts-and-estates-mag_march-1953_photo

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Copyright © 2024 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

Second Presbyterian Church — 1905

Live Oak & Germania (Liberty)

by Paula Bosse

Hello! I’ve been gone for a while — the longest period of not posting here since I started 10 years ago! Life has been chaotic for the past month or two, but things have settled down a bit, and it’s good to be back.

I’m cheating a bit with this post, as it’s basically a reworking of something I put up on the Flashback Dallas Patreon page a few weeks ago, but I’m a big fan of this church building and thought I’d go ahead and share it here.

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I love this building. The design is so interesting — I don’t think I’ve seen another church that looks quite like this one. It was built in 1904 (the first service was in March 1905), and the architects were Sanguinet & Staats of Fort Worth, who had designed the beautiful Wilson Building downtown a couple of years earlier.

The Second Presbyterian Church sat on the southeast corner of Live Oak and Germania (the latter street name was changed to “Liberty” during WWI, for patriotic reasons). Below is the original design, when a new building was to have been built on the church’s then-current property at the northwest corner of Wood and South Harwood — the Presbyterians sold the corner property to the Methodists not long after this drawing was published in The Dallas Morning News on Feb. 16, 1904 and decided to relocate to Old East Dallas. It’s interesting to see what changes were made to the design for the Live Oak church. (I prefer it without a steeple.) See it brand-new on a 1905 Sanborn map, here (top left).

Feb. 16, 1904 (DMN)

The article below is from June 21, 1904 (DMN):

June 21, 1904 (DMN)

See what this corner looks like now, on Google Street View, here. The building on the corner (at 2900 Live Oak) is a really, really strange-looking one. The Dallas Central Appraisal District (DCAD) says it was built in 1950. DCAD is almost always wrong with construction dates of older buildings. …But it’s so strange. Is it possible that the heart of the old Sanguinet & Staats church is still beating under all that weirdness? If so, it’s one of the oldest non-residential buildings in the neighborhood.

Google Street View, Jan. 2024

And to wrap this all up, this photo of the 1957 tornado was taken at this corner.

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Sources & Notes

Top photo is from the booklet “Come to Dallas” (ca. 1905), DeGolyer Library, SMU Libraries — it is accessible here.

Drawing and article from The Dallas Morning News.

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Copyright © 2024 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

Zephyr, Meet Ox Cart — 1936

zephyr_sam-houston-zephyr_oxcart_ebay_front…Ox cart, meet Zephyr

by Paula Bosse

On Oct. 4, 1936, the Sam Houston Zephyr — the very first streamlined passenger train in Texas — made one of it very first public appearances, at the Texas Centennial in Dallas. This beautiful train (check out a photo of its interior here) was operated by the Burlington-Rock Island railroad between Fort Worth and Houston, with stops in Dallas, Waxahachie, Corsicana, and Teague. (See footage of it arriving it what might be Dallas in what might be 1936 in cool home movie footage here — then go to the beginning to see great Centennial footage — some of it in color! — and other footage shot in Kidd Springs.)

Back to the Zephyr. At its Centennial stop, a photo-op presented itself: the super-new (Zephyr) alongside the super-old (an ox cart). This photo ran in newspapers around the world, accompanied by variations of the following captions:

PROGRESS! Just a zephyr in the breeze is the Burlington Zephyr, particularly when compared to an ancient ox cart. The two were shown together at the Texas centennial fair at Dallas. The speedy streamliner runs from Dallas to Houston, Texas.

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MARCH OF PROGRESS. An excellent contrast in the modes of transportation of today and yesterday is presented here as the Sam Houston Zephyr, streamlined train running between Dallas, Tex., and Houston, enters the grounds of the Texas Centennial exposition with an ox cart plodding along beside it. The presentation is part of the Cavalcade of Texas given at the exposition in Dallas. The girls are LaNeyl Brown and Peggy Humphreys.

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From a Dallas Morning News article on the Centennial exhibit at Fair Park:

The streamlined Sam Houston Zephyr, operated between Dallas, Fort Worth and Houston by the Burlington-Rock Island, will be displayed on the siding in the grounds east of the Hall of Transportation. One of the powerful Opp Mogul freight engines of the Texas & Pacific also will be shown. To furnish a contrast with modern and ancient transportation the ox cart and stagecoach used in Cavalcade will be rolled out. (DMN, Oct. 4, 1936)

zephyr_sam-houston-zephyr_oxcart_DMN_100436_events

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An interesting sidelight regarding the older modes of transportation is this blurb about the difficulty Centennial personnel had in finding authentic stagecoaches, covered wagons, and ox carts to use in various Fair Park productions celebrating the history of Texas, forcing them to resort to building reproductions (seems hard to believe that there were only two authentic stagecoaches to be found in the entire state!):

zephyr_centennial_AP-wire-story_may-1936
AP wire story, May 1936

The article is referring to props needed for the giant Cavalcade of Texas historical pageant, but check out the nice little novelty “prairie schooner” below, which served as a quirky, casual Centennial restaurant (“Smacking of the old West is the Chuck Wagon, a dining place for 250, with an overgrown chuck wagon serving as the kitchen and service counter” — Dallas Morning News, June 7, 1936):

patreon_tx-centennial_chuckwagon-restaurantDallas Historical Society

patreon_tx-centennial_chuck-wagon-restaurant_worthpointvia Worthpoint

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Sources & Notes

Top photo was found on eBay (German wire photo).

Photo of the Chuck Wagon restaurant is from the Texas Centennial Exposition Collection, Dallas Historical Society, Object ID V.38.3.245 — more info on this photo is here.

Consider becoming a member of my Flashback Dallas Patreon page for as little as $5 a month — I post there daily. No strings attached. Cancel at any time!

zephyr_sam-houston-zephyr_oxcart_ebay_front

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Copyright © 2024 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

Ulterior Flashback

patreon_armstrong-meat-packing-plant_postmarked-1921_ebay_nookA picture-perfect abattoir…

By Paula Bosse

Every couple of months I offer up a list of posts from the Flashback Dallas Patreon page — with the reminder that if you’d like to receive daily Dallas-history tidbits, please consider becoming a member, for as little as five dollars a month.

One of the posts from May concerned the unusual subject of a picture postcard: the massive Armstrong meat-packing plant in South Dallas (see it on a 1921 Sanborn map here). I’m not sure how many people would choose — or seek out — a postcard showing a slaughterhouse to send to their friends and family back home (“Having a lovely time! Wish you were here!”), but this was, verily, available for those who wanted it. (This postcard was mailed in 1921.)

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Here are the topics I’ve covered recently on Patreon. You can see titles of all the posts I’ve done over the past year or so here.

MAY 2024

  • Butterfly Greetings from Dallas, Texas – ca. 1909
  • The North Texas Building, Main Street
  • The Oriental Hotel Welcomes the Elks – 1908
  • The Official Neiman-Marcus Flag – 1966
  • Alamo Beer, “For Mothers Who Require a Natural Tonic” – 1910
  • Mister Ice (The Freezit Corp. of America) – ca. 1954
  • Alpha Epsilon Party
  • Audie Murphy Book Signing at McMurray’s – 1949
  • Gaston Avenue Baptist Church (Domeless) – ca. 1961
  • Arbuckle Bros. Grain Elevators – 1899
  • The A. Harris Employees’ Symphony Orchestra – 1923
  • Elm Street, East from Lamar — ca. 1906
  • New Yorker Become Texas Citizen, Obtains Texas Passport – 1949
  • The Dallas Skyline and “Dresser Couplings” – 1947
  • Kids on KRLD-Channel 4
  • An Evening at The Chalet, Lakewood
  • Roger Corman, RIP
  • Business Section – 1928
  • Commerce Street Bridge During the Great Flood – 1908
  • Houston Street Viaduct at Night
  • Spider-Man and the Hulk Save the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders – 1982
  • Bush & Gerts/Bush Temple of Music
  • North from Cobb Stadium – 1957
  • Topper: “Tops in Eats” – ca. 1940
  • Fire Drill Training Tower, Fair Park – 1936
  • Armstrong Meat Packing Plant
  • David Hardie Seed Co. – 1922

APRIL 2024

  • Big Tex’s Big Teeth – 1962
  • Knox Theater/Linda Darnell – 1945
  • Mystery Boarding House
  • The Dallas-Fort Worth Pike at Chalk Hill – ca. 1920
  • Ernie Banks, Baseball Legend from Dallas
  • Nighttime Melba – 1955
  • Warren Beatty (et al.) in Denton – 1967
  • The Cloverleaf
  • Juliette Fowler, From the Air – 1956
  • A Fistful of Corny Dogs – 1979
  • Hello, Weekend! Hello, Schlitz!
  • Big D Jamboree – 1955
  • Northwest Highway, If You Must – 1945
  • Love Field Hospital – 1918
  • Minit-Man Automatic Car Washing Station
  • SMU Graduation Procession – 1919
  • Drink Dr Pepper for Vim, Vigor, and Vitality – 1900
  • Oak Cliff: Free from Mosquitoes and Malaria – 1907
  • Springsteen Canceled at the Sportatorium – 1974
  • Fooshee & Cheek Building on Gaston Avenue – 1926
  • Love Field Interior, Empty – 1958
  • Mr. Tweedy: Lovable, Hapless Sap
  • DP&L Substation, South Dallas — 1925
  • “The Coziest Gift Shop In the South” – 1912
  • Texas Has So. Many. Things. – 1936
  • Preston Road Shopping Center
  • Happy Anniversary: Thank You!
  • The Ford Building at Fair Park – 1936

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Sources & Notes

Armstrong postcard found on eBay.

Subscribe to my Patreon page for the rock-bottom price of only five bucks a month! In return, you get a post every day. Cancel anytime! No strings attached! The page is here. Thank you!

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Copyright © 2024 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

The Cloverleaf

patreon_cloverleaf_south_txdot_slotboom_ca-mid-1950s_colorBehold... (via TxDOT)

by Paula Bosse

I have such a weird fondness for the old Central Expressway/Northwest Highway cloverleaf interchange, at NorthPark. In fact, I kind of forget it’s not there anymore. I have fairly scary memories of my mother driving like a bat out of hell on it. I’m pretty sure the car was tipped at an angle on two tires as we rounded those curves. And I remember being behind the wheel myself when I was a new driver, white-knuckling it until I hit the straight-away. Strange that I have such fond memories of it, because a lot of those memories were kind of terrifying! I guess it has to be the design. It was cool. COOL! The photo above is just great. The view is to the south from Northwest Highway, across open Caruth farmland. Mid-’50s. Pre-NorthPark. Pre-people. Pre-traffic.

Below, after NorthPark’s arrival (photo from Oct. 1967):

patreon_cloverleaf_northpark_oct-1967_UTA_slotboom_color

Here’s an interesting photo I stumbled across in an issue of SMU’s Daily Campus newspaper from 1951 — a personal-size cloverleaf:

patreon_cloverleaf_SMU-daily-campus_050551SMU Daily Campus, May 5, 1951

I really miss the Northwest Highway cloverleaf. I think about it almost every time I drive past NorthPark on Central. Shoulda kept it, Dallas.

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Sources & Notes

The top two photos are from the book Dallas-Fort Worth Freeways by Oscar Slotboom (top photo from TxDOT, second photo from UTA Libraries, Special Collections).

This post appeared in a slightly different form on the Flashback Dallas Patreon page.

patreon_cloverleaf_south_txdot_slotboom_ca-mid-1950s_color

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Copyright © 2024 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

KVIL: The “VIL” Stands for Village

sewell-auto_KVIL_ebayNortheast corner of Preston & Mockingbird…

by Paula Bosse

Sewell Village Used Cars and a Mobil station were at the northeast corner of Preston and Mockingbird (Sewell was at 5460 Preston Road), catty-corner from Highland Park Village. The KVIL studios were right around the corner, at 4152 Mockingbird Lane, across the street from the Dallas Country Club — you can see the jauntily-lettered sign in the background of this undated.photo. I am really bad at determining car-model years, but let’s say this is about 1960. What does this corner look like these days? It looks like this.

I just learned (from the KVIL Wikipedia page) that the “VIL” in the station’s call letters stood for “Village,” as in Highland Park Village. Who knew? The AM station began broadcasting on March 1, 1960, and the FM station hit the airwaves on Aug. 25, 1961. I believe both stations had a strict “no-rock-and-roll” policy. In the early days, a block of programming was aimed directly at housewives:

The program policy followed by the station is designed to fit the various hours of the day. For the driving hours when listeners drive to work (5:45 to 9 a.m.) and return (4:30 to 6:55 p.m.) the music is livelier. “Sing Along” is the order of the day from 9 a.m. to noon for the housewife’s work hours. (“KVIL Mark’s First Birthday Wednesday,” Dallas Morning News, March 1, 1961)

Here are a couple of hep, caffeinated KVIL ads from those early days:

patreon_KVIL_HPHS_1961-yrbk1961 ad

patreon_KVIL_HPHS_1962-yrbk1962 ad

kvil-logo_broadcasting-mag_122462_ad-det1962 logo

Most of my sort of generally vague awareness of KVIL was in the 1980s, when it was an absolute powerhouse in the ratings. But even its most stalwart fans would probably not describe its playlist as “bright,” “exciting,” or “swinging.” But look how much fun the promotions department imagined the effect on “young adults” was!

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And what about Sewell Village Cadillac and its selection of “Village Fine” used cars? If circa-1960 Highland Park is going to have a used car lot, you better believe it’s going to be populated with Cadillacs. (UPDATE: Thanks to Peter K’s link in the comments, check out what appears to be the original photo by Squire Haskins, with a wider view, at the UTA Libraries website, here.)

sewell-village-cadillac_032158March 1958

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Sources & Notes

Photo from eBay.

KVIL ads from the 1961 and 1962 Highland Park High School yearbooks.

KVIL logo is a detail from an ad that appeared in the Dec. 24, 1962 issue of Broadcasting magazine.

This post appeared in an abbreviated form on the Flashback Dallas Patreon page.

sewell-auto_KVIL_ebay

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Copyright © 2024 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

A Few Photo Additions to Past Posts — #23

banks-ernie_wife-mollye-ector-banks_101155_patton-collection_DHSHometown hero… (Dallas Historical Society)

by Paula Bosse

Time for another installment of whatever this is, in which I add photos I’ve recently come across to old posts on the same topic, in order to keep things together.

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The photo above shows baseball great (and Dallas native) Ernie Banks, and his wife, Mollye, on a trip back to Dallas to participate in an all-star game and to be the man of the hour on Ernie Banks Day in Big D (Oct. 11, 1955). I’ve added this photo to the 2014 post “Ernie Banks: From Booker T. Washington High School to the Baseball Hall of Fame to the Presidential Medal of Freedom.” (Source: John Leslie Patton Jr. Papers, Dallas Historical Society, Object ID V.86.50.902)

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Below is a somewhat odd-looking, down-at-the-heels house, as seen in 1975 — at the time, it was the HQ for community radio station KCHU. The once-palatial residence, built in 1897, was on Maple Avenue, a favorite residential street of the upper crusters. It still stands, and is, somehow, more beautiful today than it was when it was built 127 years ago. It is now Hotel St. Germain (2516 Maple). I’ve added this screenshot of a house that has seen some STUFF to a post from 2019, “The Murphy House — Maple Avenue.” (Source: screenshot and detail from footage shot in December 1975 by KERA-Channel 13, probably for their local show “Newsroom”; KERA Collection, G. William Jones Film and Video Collection, Hamon Arts Library, SMU — watch the short report about KCHU on YouTube here)

kchu_murphy-house_KERA_dec-1975_screenshot

kchu-sign_kera_dec-1975_SMU

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This photo shows the former Powell University prep school at Binkley and Hillcrest, across from SMU. The school was dissolved in 1927/1928. This photo is from 1931, and the old place is looking a little shaggy. Not sure what it was at that time. The building still stands (or last time I looked, anyway!). Nice to see a horse grazing on the property (in the Park Cities…). This photo has been added to 2019’s “Send Your Kids to Prep School ‘Under the Shadow of SMU’ — 1915.” (Source: Brown Book, University Park Public Library)

powell-univ-training-school_brown-bk_university-park_1931

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In 2014, I wrote about the Metzger’s Milk home delivery drivers wearing a new uniform, which included Bermuda shorts and knee socks. This was pretty shocking at the time, and it made news around the country — it was featured in Life magazine, and there was even newsreel footage. I’ve added the silent footage to the post “Metzger’s Milkmen in Bermuda Shorts — 1955.” Watch the 1-minute silent clip from 1955 here. (Source: Grinberg, Paramount, Pathe Newsreels, via Getty Images)

metzgers_bermuda-shorts-footage_1955_getty

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For those who couldn’t afford to be a member of the swanky Lakewood Country Club, the nearby Bob-O-Links course was the affordable neighborhood answer for those looking to play an affordable round of golf. This matchbook cover art has been added to 2016’s Bob-O-Links Golf Course — 1924-1973.” (Source: eBay)

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I haven’t had a Great Flood mention in a while. I’ve added this photo (a real photo postcard) to the 2015 post about a boat that served an important role in rescuing victims, “The Nellie Maurine: When a Pleasure Boat Became a Rescue Craft During the Great Trinity River Flood of 1908.” (Source: John Miller Morris collection of Texas real photographic postcards and photographs, DeGolyer Library, SMU, here)

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A photo of the all-dressed-up Oriental Hotel (southeast corner of Commerce & Akard), draped in bunting and various festoonage to welcome the Elks Convention to Dallas in The Year of Our Flood 1908, is now squeezed into 2022’s “Elks-a-Plenty — 1908.” Note the woman with the parasol at the bottom right corner. (Source: eBay)

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Fast-forward to 1939 and a screenshot from a fantastic bit of color (!!) film brought to our attention a few years ago by author Mark Doty and local bon vivant Robert Wilonsky (I HIGHLY encourage you to watch the short film here). It shows the legendary (to me, anyway) animated neon Coca-Cola sign which once stood at the 3-way downtown intersection of Live Oak, Elm, and Ervay. I’ve added it to “Tomorrow’s Weather at Live Oak & Elm — 1955-ish,” from 2016. (Source: screenshot from a 1939 color film — see link above to watch it)

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I posted about Salih’s earlier this year, and Mark Salih, the son of co-owner Jack Salih, sent me this photo showing the interior of the restaurant and a glimpse of the carved Western mural on the walls. Owner George Salih is on the far right, and his brother Jack is next to him. I’ve added it to “Salih’s, Preston Center: 1953-1977.” (Source: Mark Salih, used with permission — thank you, Mark!)

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Finally, I recently updated an old post from 2014, “Ned Riddle: Dallas Artist and Creator of ‘Mr. Tweedy.'” My parents were fans of the Mr. Tweedy single-panel comic that appeared in newspapers around the country, and I used to read those little books over and over. Poor Mr. Tweedy. Nothing ever went right for him! I added this panel to the post. (Source: somewhere online — the panel appeared in newspapers on Nov. 5, 1969)

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That should do it for now!

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