Historic Images of Dallas
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Historic Images of Dallas
I'm digitizing and posting my personal collection of photos and Kodachrome slides here:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/dfwcre8ti ... 8842087452
Enjoy!
https://www.flickr.com/photos/dfwcre8ti ... 8842087452
Enjoy!
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Great collection!!!
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
I found some great little historical pics and accompanying information regarding downtown Dallas on this site... Amazing, some of the architecture we used to have.
https://flashbackdallas.com/category/ne ... /downtown/
https://flashbackdallas.com/category/ne ... /downtown/
"He doesn't know how to use the three seashells..."
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Flashback Dallas is such a treasure. Thanks for sharing!muncien wrote:I found some great little historical pics and accompanying information regarding downtown Dallas on this site... Amazing, some of the architecture we used to have.
https://flashbackdallas.com/category/ne ... /downtown/
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Here's a composite image of Theater Row that I worked on showing which towers replaced the theaters between Akard and Ervay.
Amazing how we sacrificed the street level for vertical bragging rights.
Amazing how we sacrificed the street level for vertical bragging rights.
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
dude, sweet
too bad we cannot have both
too bad we cannot have both
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Nice work. Crazy how the scale changed so drastically on everything.lakewoodhobo wrote:Here's a composite image of Theater Row that I worked on showing which towers replaced the theaters between Akard and Ervay.
Amazing how we sacrificed the street level for vertical bragging rights.
3723E4AA-4BCE-4416-B1B1-032393C4AD57.jpeg
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
That's Elm....when did it become one way?
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Here's my original photo, probably from 1945. The streets became one-way after streetcars were removed in the 1960s.Tnexster wrote:That's Elm....when did it become one way?
https://www.flickr.com/photos/dfwcre8tive/15339492725/
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Stunning recreation of Dallas' Union Station in the 1950's. Gold plated No-Prize to whoever can say where this is located.
- Hannibal Lecter
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
The trains at Northpark.
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Nope, but I will have to check that out.
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Museum of the American Railroad in Frisco?
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Old red courthousetexasstar wrote:
Stunning recreation of Dallas' Union Station in the 1950's. Gold plated No-Prize to whoever can say where this is located.
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Exelone31 bags the no-prize. This is the exhibit in Frisco.
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Woohoo! I've wanted to check that place out, is it pretty cool?texasstar wrote:Exelone31 bags the no-prize. This is the exhibit in Frisco.
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
You definitely should. It is awesome!exelone31 wrote:Woohoo! I've wanted to check that place out, is it pretty cool?texasstar wrote:Exelone31 bags the no-prize. This is the exhibit in Frisco.
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
I'm finding lots of goodies in the archives of The Thanks-Giving Foundation (albums of photos/slides of downtown Dallas in the 1960s-1980s). Digitizing everything will be a big undertaking.
Chapel of Thanksgiving looking from Elm Street, circa 1981.
Chapel of Thanksgiving looking from Elm Street, circa 1981.
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Wouldn't that be looking from Elm street?
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
^ Looking from right about https://goo.gl/maps/ef4gJPvX2F32 on Elm Street.
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
dfwcre8tive wrote:I'm finding lots of goodies in the archives of The Thanks-Giving Foundation (albums of photos/slides of downtown Dallas in the 1960s-1980s). Digitizing everything will be a big undertaking.
Chapel of Thanksgiving looking from Main Street, circa 1981.
It's a great photo of the chapel, but I'm a little more interested in the foreground showing construction of 1700 Pacific and that underground cavern that never became a transit tunnel.
Would love to see more.
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Yes; that's Elm.R1070 wrote:Wouldn't that be looking from Elm street?
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
This building has been known as the Dorsey Building and Aaron Brothers Furs Building at 1000 Commerce. It was demolished in 1979, the same year that the Baker Hotel closed.
Today it's the most valuable McDonald's in Dallas and possibly Texas, sitting on land that's worth almost $1MM more than the building itself.
Today it's the most valuable McDonald's in Dallas and possibly Texas, sitting on land that's worth almost $1MM more than the building itself.
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
https://www.dmagazine.com/frontburner/2 ... as-photos/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/cityofdal ... 5642515689Lost Dallas Author Uncovers Treasure Trove of Vintage 1970s and 1980s Dallas Photos
BY PETER SIMEK PUBLISHED IN FRONTBURNER APRIL 11, 2019 10:05 AM
To the man who only has a hammer, everything he encounters begins to look like a nail.
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Exterior and interior pics of the Music Hall at Fair Park before the heavy renovation/addition in the 70s. Pretty much all of the 1920s decor was ripped out during the renovation. What's there now is a 70s style theater in a 1920s building.
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Also, the 1920's venue was more auditorium rather than a true Theater. You can tell because the sound is just so terrible and it had none of the amenities expected in 1970's musical theater compatible venue. It's really a hard thing to do to maintain history with this building and still make it useful without heavy modification. Dallas Summer Musicals makes it work despite the building having less than satisfactory acoustics. I wish they could restore more of the 1920's architecture and rid us of the 1970's god awful mods but they would ultimately have to be replaced with our current architecture period mods. The previous venue didn't have a large enough lobby for example so any removal of the 1970's work would require a similar replacement with modern materials which I am not against happening to keep the venue fresh.
“Growth for the sake of growth is the ideology of the cancer cell”
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
That’s true. I wonder if they will ever decide to replace this venue or do another major renovation. It’s kind of embarrassing for a city as big as Dallas, to not have a high quality musical theater. Bass Hall in Fort Worth is a much better venue in comparison to the Music Hall.cowboyeagle05 wrote:Also, the 1920's venue was more auditorium rather than a true Theater. You can tell because the sound is just so terrible and it had none of the amenities expected in 1970's musical theater compatible venue. It's really a hard thing to do to maintain history with this building and still make it useful without heavy modification. Dallas Summer Musicals makes it work despite the building having less than satisfactory acoustics. I wish they could restore more of the 1920's architecture and rid us of the 1970's god awful mods but they would ultimately have to be replaced with our current architecture period mods. The previous venue didn't have a large enough lobby for example so any removal of the 1970's work would require a similar replacement with modern materials which I am not against happening to keep the venue fresh.
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
That's the Arts District.
“Growth for the sake of growth is the ideology of the cancer cell”
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
True, I forgot about the Winspear. Much intimate venue.cowboyeagle05 wrote:That's the Arts District.
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Dallas City Photographer Prints from the Mid-20th Century
https://cityofdallaspreservation.wordpr ... h-century/
https://cityofdallaspreservation.wordpr ... h-century/
Re: Historic Images of Dallas
This is awesome, thank you for sharing!lakewoodhobo wrote:Dallas City Photographer Prints from the Mid-20th Century
https://cityofdallaspreservation.wordpr ... h-century/
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Re: Historic Images of Dallas
Cool!!! Thank you guys!