Flashback : Dallas

A Miscellany: History, Ads, Pop Culture

Elm Street at Night, Coming & Going — 1950s

elm-st-night_ebayHave a sudden hankering for a fistful of roasted peanuts?

by Paula Bosse

Two postcards from the Fabulous Fifties showing Dallas’ Theater Row, lit up at night — one looking east (above), and one looking west (below).

The top view — taken from about Stone — was probably taken in the early- to mid-’50s. (See the same view today, here.) The following Elm Street businesses — all of which can be seen in this postcard — were listed in the 1953 city directory:

1602 Elm — W. T. Grant (dept. store)
1605 — Dundee Smart Clothes
1607 — Planters Peanuts (This place fascinates me!)
1607a — Wallace Studios (photography studio)
1609 — Dunton’s Cafeteria
1610 — Franklin’s (women’s clothing)
1613 — Henri’s Hollywood Beauty Studio
1614 — Baker’s Shoes
1623 — Palace Theatre

ERVAY crosses
1700 — Mangel’s (women’s clothing)
1705 — Lee Optical
1713 — Haverty’s (furniture)
1806 — Volk Bros. (dept. store)

ST. PAUL crosses
1907 — Tower Theatre
1911 — Melba Theatre (barely visible)
1921 — Majestic Theatre

Here’s Elm looking west, taken at about North Harwood. (See the same view today, here.) The movie playing at the Majestic, “The True Story of Jesse James,” was released in February, 1957.

elm-street-night_ca1957

The businesses seen here, on the south side of the street:

1918 Elm — Hall’s Credit Clothiers
1922 — Askin’s Credit Clothing Store
1924 — Ben Morris Jewelry
1926 — Majestic Cafe (*possibly* — I’m not sure if it was there in 1958)

In all my wanderings through photos of old Dallas, my biggest regret is that I never experienced downtown-Dallas movie-going in the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s. Mr. Peanut, we hardly knew ye (or in my case, I never knew ye).

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Sources & Notes

Top postcard from eBay.

Second postcard from the Billy Holcomb Collection, found on Cinema Treasures here. (If anyone has a better image of this, let me know!)

The thought of buying warm, just-roasted nuts on the sidewalk of a busy downtown street makes me feel all nostalgic for something I’ve never actually experienced. It looks like the Planters Peanut shop was in a couple of different locations before it moved to the one seen above at 1607 Elm — first at 1519 Main (in about 1929), and then the 1500 block of Elm, next to Cullum & Boren (from 1931). Read a few memories of this Elm Street shop here; and see photos of a shop still operating in Memphis, here.

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Copyright © 2015 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

Waking Up Every Day To an Unimpeded View of Lake Cliff Park

oak-cliff_5th-street_lake-cliff-park_ebayThe red-roofed Frank Rogers house, E. Fifth & N. Denver, Oak Cliff

by Paula Bosse

I saw this postcard of a row of houses on East Fifth Street in Oak Cliff and wondered if the house with the red roof and the low stone wall was still standing. Happily, it is. With a little digging, I discovered that the house at 320 E. Fifth Street was built in 1922 or very, very early 1923 for Frank Rogers, one of Dallas’ top photographers. A photographer would want to live with a beautiful view, and he certainly had it there — Lake Cliff Park was right across the street. (The artist Frank Reaugh also lived on East Fifth, a block or two to the west.) Frank Rogers (1878-1961) lived in the house he built at the corner of East Fifth and North Denver until his death at the age of 82.

It appears that Rogers bought the property in the survey area known as Robinson’s Park Place in December of 1920 for $8,000. The address does not exist until his house is built — it shows up for the first time in the 1923 city directory. The 1922 Sanborn map (see it here) shows the corner lot empty — as well as most of the rest of the lots along East Fifth between North Crawford and North Denver.

Here are a few bits and pieces of random information from a search on the address. In 1933, Rogers’ German Shepherd got loose. That park would have been an absolute paradise for a dog on the lam.

roger_dmn_090233Sept. 2, 1933

And in 1936, for some reason Rogers was selling a “Nubian milch goat,” a friendly source of milk which was, presumably, kept on the property. Was it being sold at the behest of neighbors? The publication Milch Goat Dairy (1917) informs us that “no member of the goat family is more peaceful or gentle than the Nubian, and while the bucks of this breed have the same odor that all goat bucks have, the odor is far less in this breed.” Still. The other well-heeled neighbors might have had a few goat-related issues.

320_dmn_111736-goatNov. 17, 1936

Nubian goat! (Wikipedia)

There was a room or small apartment at the rear of the house, and directories show that (at least through the ’20s) there was an ever-changing roster of lodgers who lived there — every year a different name was listed. They were most likely employees. In 1929, the occupant was J. W. McCrimon/McCrimmon, who may have been the same person who, as a minor in 1922, was accused of wounding another minor with a shotgun.

mccrimon_dmn_082922Dallas Morning News, Aug. 29, 1922

Frank Rogers began his career as a newspaper photographer who later ran his own photography studio with his son, Norman. He preferred commercial jobs to bread-and-butter studio portraiture, though he did both. Whatever kind of job he was doing, he preferred to use flash powder when he could, a practice which caused several injuries (and even fires!) over the years.

A news article in 1945 described one such incident: during a commissioned job in which he was taking hundreds of employee photographs for a large company, his flash-powder gun exploded and he was “seriously burned on the hands and face. His spectacles, physicians told him, probably saved his eyesight” (DMN, Feb. 10, 1945).

And here he is in those spectacles:

rogers-frank_portrait

Here’s another photo of the happy-looking photographer, posing with his camera and the potentially incendiary accoutrement.

rogers-frank_at-work_ca-1950s

But back to the house. Here it is today.

rogers-house_googleGoogle Street View

And another view, this time with the front of the house visible.

rogers-house_bingBing StreetSide

If I had access to flash powder, I’d go out today and take an extremely well-lit photo of an old Dallas building (and hope I’d survive the experience) — as a nod to Frank Rogers, his cool house, and all the wonderful photos of Dallas he took in the first half of the 20th century. Thanks, Frank!

rogers-frank_ad_dallas-directory_1944-45
Frank Rogers and Son ad, 1944-45 Dallas directory

rogers-frank_1936-directory1936 Dallas directory

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Sources & Notes

Postcard is from eBay.

Frank Rogers was a busy man. If you’re interested in Dallas history (and I’m guessing you are if you’re reading a Dallas history blog), you’ve probably seen dozens and dozens (and dozens) of his photos without even knowing it. The Frank Rogers Collection is housed at the Dallas Public Library. I’ve used a few of his photos in previous posts — one of my favorites is his view of the Akard Street Canyon, here.

Another photo of the house can be seen in the 1980 photo below, from the Texas Historical Commission Historical Resources Survey, via the Portal to Texas History, here.

rogers-frank_home_320-east-fifth_oak-cliff_portal_1980

Take a tour of the Lake Cliff Park area via Google Street View, here.

And finally, here’s where Frank’s house is, marked in red.

rogers-house_googleGoogle Maps

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Copyright © 2015 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

The State Fair of Texas: “This Is Where All My Money Has Gone”

state-fair_ebay

by Paula Bosse

Today is the last day of the fair. If you haven’t been yet, you should go! Have fun — and watch your moolah drain from your wallet at an alarming rate. It’s a tradition!

state-fair_money

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Postcard from eBay. Click it to see a REALLY  BIG image!

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Copyright © 2015 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

From the Vault: Gusher at Old Red! — 1890

artesian_bywaters-hogue_bw-smu“Artesian Well Gushes on the Courthouse Grounds”
Mural by Jerry Bywaters & Alexandre Hogue (1934)

by Paula Bosse

I had meant to post this look back at a previous Flashback Dallas post last week! On October 9, 1890 — 125 years ago — a desperately-needed water source was discovered beneath the then-under-construction Dallas County Court House. Read how an artesian well came to be sunk on the grounds of the Old Red courthouse, the incredible gusher it produced, and the jubilant celebration that followed. This discovery was a hugely important moment in Dallas’ history — for one thing, it assured the city’s very survival — but I found almost nothing about it except in contemporary reports from the newspapers of the day. So I wrote about it, and it’s one of my favorite posts. You can read it here.

Happy belated 125th anniversary, old capped and forgotten well!

I never did receive any feedback on whether this odd structure on the courthouse lawn is, in fact, what remains of that well. It seems like it should be — it’s on the exact spot where the gusher gushed. …Is it?

Photo: Paula Bosse

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Photo of mural by Harry Bennett from The Bywaters Special Collections, Hamon Arts Library, Central University Libraries, Southern Methodist University; more information is here.

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Copyright © 2015 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

An Afternoon Outing with SMU Frat Boys & Their Dates — 1917

smu_omega-phi_dallas-hall_1917_degolyerCampus couples, 1917

by Paula Bosse

I came across three wonderful World War One-era photos in the SMU archives while I was looking for something else. You know how you can become enthralled by the charm of old photos and sit for long stretches of time staring at every little detail and wondering about the lives of the unidentified people who populate them? That happened to me with these. There is one particular young woman who stands out more than anyone else. Not only is she the best-dressed person in the photos, she also seems calm, collected, and serene. She looks friendly. She was probably very pleasant to have around.

These three photographs show a group of ten young couples and a pair of chaperones spending a beautiful sunny day together, with the highlight of the day being a trip to Highland Park’s Exall Lake. The men are SMU students, identified only as members of the Omega Phi fraternity. The women are identified merely as “dates,” but I’m sure that some of them were also SMU students. The photograph above shows the crowd gathered on campus in front of Dallas Hall. The woman in white looks like she’s on a pedestal, glowing in a spotlight. Below, a closer look at her stylish outfit (as well as a look at the young be-medaled WWI soldier next to her).

smu_omega-phi_dallas-hall_1917_degolyer-det1

And, below, a similar detail, but this one showing the daintily crossed ankles of another pretty girl, seated beside a sour-looking companion.

smu_omega-phi_dallas-hall_1917_degolyer-det2

And here’s the gang on the idyllic banks of Exall Lake. Diane Galloway included this photograph in her book The Park Cities, A Photohistory with this caption:

At one time a bridge crossed Exall Lake near the Cary house, shown in the distance. The photographer was standing on the bridge to capture this picture of well-dressed SMU students going boating on the lake. A trip to Lakeside Drive was one of the few off-campus excursions permitted in 1917.

I love this photo. If I didn’t know what the Turtle Creek area looked like, I’d be hard-pressed to identify this as Dallas!

smu_omega-phi_exall-lake_1917_degolyer

Here’s a close-up of the beatific, smiling woman in white. I like the kid lurking in the background.

smu_omega-phi_exall-lake_1917_degolyer-det1

And the boat.

smu_omega-phi_exall-lake_1917_degolyer-det2

And the sour-looking guy again, looking even more annoyed than before.

smu_omega-phi_exall-lake_1917_degolyer-det3

And here’s the crowd sitting on the steps of the frat house (which was located at Haynie and Hillcrest). The personnel has changed a little bit (they gained a woman and lost a man), but (almost) everyone seems pretty happy.

smu_omega-phi_porch_1917_degolyer

And, below, my very favorite detail from these three photos.

smu_omega-phi_porch_1917_degolyer-det1

After a bit of sleuthing, I found a picture of the house at the time these photos were taken. It was actually a residence which was, I think, being rented out to the small group of Omega Phis. They had a proper fraternity house built several years later.

omega-phi-house_rotunda_1917

The top photo had “1917” written on the back, so I checked SMU’s Rotunda yearbooks from around that time. Here’s a look at the men who were members of Omega Phi in 1918. Several of these faces match the ones in the photos of the afternoon outing.

omega-phi_rotunda-1918

And, below, a photo collage from the Omega Phi page of the 1917 Rotunda. Several of the women look familiar. I see the Woman in White in at least one of these snapshots.

omega-phi_photos_rotunda_1917

And here she is, close up. I hope she was as happy, intelligent, and confident in her real life as she appears to be in these photos.

smu_omega-phi_porch_1917_degolyer-det2

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Sources & Notes

The three photos of the afternoon outing all come from the collection of the DeGolyer Library, Central University Libraries, Southern Methodist University:

  • “Omega Phi Fraternity members and their dates in front of Dallas Hall” is here.
  • “Omega Phi Fraternity member outing to Exall Lake” is here.
  • “Omega Phi Fraternity members and their dates on porch” is here.

The quote from Diane Galloway comes from her FANTASTIC book, The Park Cities, A Photohistory (Dallas: Diane Galloway, 1989), p. 24.

The ersatz Omega Phi fraternity house was located at 115 Haynie Avenue, just west of Atkins (now Hillcrest). (The photo of the exterior of the house is from the 1917 SMU Rotunda yearbook.)

omega-phi_map_19191919 map (detail), Portal to Texas History

I have absolutely no idea how college fraternities work, but it seems that when they formed on the SMU campus in 1915, the Omega Phi group was not actually affiliated with a national fraternity. They “petitioned” to be chartered by national groups, but they finally stopped trying after 11 years of, I guess, being repeatedly turned down — in 1926 they declared themselves to be an “independent society.” But one year later, they were granted a charter by the national Kappa Sigma fraternity. In the Dallas Morning News article announcing the news, this sentence was included: “The local chapter will be known as Delta Pi chapter.” I have no idea what any of that means, but if you’re really into these things, read the DMN article “Kappa Sigmas Grant Charter” (Sept. 26, 1927), here.

As for the identities of the women in the photos, it’s a mystery. I would assume, though, that at least some of them were the women mentioned in this little article about a cozy winter get-together at the Haynie Ave. house:

omega-phi_smu-campus_011917DMN, Jan. 19, 1917

If you’re not familiar with beautiful Exall Lake, you can watch a short, minute-long video of the lake’s history, produced to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Highland Park, here.

For other posts featuring photos I’ve zoomed in on to reveal interesting little vignettes, click here.

UPDATE: I stumbled across another photo of this group, from Diane Galloway’s book The Park Cities, A Photohistory:

smu_group-date_park-cities-photohistory_galloway

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Copyright © 2015 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

“The Fair Is In the Air — Let’s Go!”

state-fair_1923Look at this 1923 typeface!

by Paula Bosse

Here we are again in the final days of another State Fair of Texas. Why not take a look at a few random images of the fair over the years. (Click pictures for larger images.)

First, from 1900, the entrance to the fairgrounds. (It appears to be the same view as the top postcard seen in a previous post, here, just a few steps inside the archway.)

fairgrounds-main-entrance_bohemian_1900_fwplFort Worth Public Library

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A cartoon from The Dallas Morning News in 1912 — “The People’s University.” Remember, it’s not just about Ferris wheels and candy apples.

state-fair_dmn_102012-cartoonDMN, Oct. 20, 1912

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1921. Don’t miss The Whip.

state-fair_1921

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From the Texas Centennial in 1936, a shot of a remarkably spotless Midway. (Am I the only one who would have paid to see the “28-Ft. Monster” do battle with whatever freakish specimens were ensconced within the walls of the Ripley’s Believe It Or Not building?)

tx-centennial-midway_1936_ebay

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During World War II, no fair was held between 1942 and 1945. “Not until the boys come home, will there be another State Fair of Texas.”

state-fair_wwii_tx-almanac_1945-46

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By the ’50s, everything was back to normal. Big Tex had arrived, and this ad promises “She’s a LULU in ’52.” Martin & Lewis and whatever a Thrillcade was!

state-fair_dmn_092552_lg

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And, lastly, an aerial view of the Midway from 1966. Now this IS all Ferris wheels and candy apples. (To watch a short collection of color footage from the damp 1967 SFOT — including a sad, rainy parade downtown — click here.)

state-fair_1966_UNTUniversity of North Texas

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Sources & Notes

1900 photo of the entrance to the fair is from The Bohemian magazine (1900) in the collection of the Fort Worth Public Library (those perforations in the photo are the FWPL’s).

1921 photo — I’m afraid I have no source on this one.

1936 postcard of the Centennial Midway is from eBay.

Patriotic WWII ad is from the 1945-1946 Texas Almanac.

Photo of the 1966 Midway is from the University of North Texas University Libraries blog, here.

My previous collection of SFOT photos over the decades appeared in the post “So Sorry Bill, But Albert Is Taking Me To The State Fair of Texas,” here.

Other Flashback Dallas posts on the State Fair of Texas are here; posts specifically on the Texas Centennial are here.

Again … some of these pictures are pretty dang big — when in doubt, click ’em!

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Copyright © 2015 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

 

“A City Built On the Solid Rock of Service” — 1927

ad-dallas-chamber-of-commerce_tx-almanac_1927-det“Opportunity!”

by Paula Bosse

Below, a 1927 Dallas Chamber of Commerce ad with some interesting statistics.

ad-dallas-chamber-of-commerce_tx-almanac_1927

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OPPORTUNITY

The CITY OF PROGRESS invites YOU to share in its PROSPERITY.

DALLAS–in 1900 a town of forty-thousand; in 1927 a city of a quarter million; forty-second in population; third as an agricultural implement distributing point; fifth as a dry goods market; fifteenth as a general jobbing center–the first city of the Southwest, in the fastest growing section of the United States.

Manufacturers, distributors and retailers are invited to investigate Dallas–a city built on the solid rock of service.

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Pretty impressive. And the illustration of a dynamic city on the other side of that viaduct is all but throbbing with energy.

The illustration from a 1929 Chamber of Commerce ad is even less modest: it shows Dallas as the center of the universe, center stage on Planet Earth, lit up by the sun and the giant Klieg lights of space.

ad-dallas-chamber-of-commerce_tx-almanac_1929-det

I kind of think Dallas has pretty much always seen itself like this.

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Sources & Notes

Ads from the 1927 and 1929 editions of The Texas Almanac and State Industrial Guide.

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Copyright © 2015 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

“Cemetery at Twilight” by Frank Reaugh

reaugh_cemetery-at-twilight_nd_UT_ransom-ctrHarry Ransom Center/University of Texas at Austin

by Paula Bosse

In fond memory of my recently deceased computer, I give you a lovely pastel drawing of a cemetery by the legendary Dallas artist, Frank Reaugh. RIP, dear laptop — we learned a lot about Dallas history together.

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“Cemetery at Twilight” by Frank Reaugh (undated); from the Frank Reaugh Art Collection at the Harry Ransom Center, The University of Texas at Austin. See the full image, framed and unframed, here.

Click for larger image.

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Copyright © 2015 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

From the Vault: The First Texas-OU Game in Dallas — 1912

tx-players_dmn_101912bThe guy on the right looks particularly intimidating….

by Paula Bosse

It’s that time again. Read my previous post, “The First Texas-OU Game in Dallas — 1912” (back when the game was held in Gaston Park), here.

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Photo of three of the Texas players from The Dallas Morning News, Oct. 19, 1912 (the day of that first game). Check out the original post to see the much more collegiate-looking members of the Oklahoma team.

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Copyright © 2015 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.

Dallas Fire Works Ad — 1891

ad-dallas-fireworks_1891-directory

by Paula Bosse

Even in the 1890s, Oak Cliff was encouraging people to buy local.

DALLAS FIRE WORKS
Manufacturer of
Fire Works of All Kinds.
Whistling Bombs and Rockets Also Exhibitions A Specialty.
Special Designs of any Kind Made to Order.
Send For Price Lists.
PATRONIZE AND PROTECT HOME INDUSTRY.
Take Oak Cliff and West Dallas Elevated R.R. to Factory.

Louis J. Witte, Manager.
P.O. Address Care Board of Trade.

Do NOT go to Fort Worth for your fireworks!

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Ad from the 1891 city directory.

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Copyright © 2015 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.