{"id":1095,"date":"2026-03-13T03:36:58","date_gmt":"2026-03-13T08:36:58","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/paoprod.com\/blog\/?p=1095"},"modified":"2026-03-15T19:49:48","modified_gmt":"2026-03-16T00:49:48","slug":"dfw-in-vintage-photos-take-ii","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/paoprod.com\/blog\/2026\/03\/13\/dfw-in-vintage-photos-take-ii\/","title":{"rendered":"DFW in vintage photos, take II"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"TweakPost\">\r\n\r\nHere is another selection of rare and mostly one-of-a-kind photos of the Dallas-Fort Worth area, drawn from my personal collection of prints, slides, and film negatives.\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nC.H. Edwards' Music House, 1890s\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nCharles Hodge Edwards moved to Dallas in the 1870s and opened a piano store at 407 Main Street.  He set up shop in at least three locations <!-- progressively farther east of the Trinity River --> before settling by 1884 at 733-735 Main.  This cabinet card photo, most likely from the 1890s, captures that final location, the address having been changed in 1891 to 265-267 Main Street as part of a citywide address renumbering initiative.  C.H. Edwards' younger brother, James H. Edwards, is identified at the bottom of the photo as the third from left of the six people pictured.  Today, the old site of the music house is occupied by the Westin Hotel\/One Main Place.\r\n<!-- 407 Main St (1877), 705 Main (1878), 725 Main (1880 and 1881), 725 Main St (1883 per city directory), 733+735 Main St (1884) (confirmed on 1885 Sanborn maps) -->\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/Vintage-199.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; vertical-align:bottom\" alt=\"C.H. Edwards Music House, 1890s\">\r\n<figcaption style=\"font-size:80%; text-align:center; line-height:125%; margin-top:.25em\">\r\nC.H. Edwards Music House at 265-267 Main Street, 1890s\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n<!--more-->\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nView down Main Street near Akard, circa 1909\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThis postcard depicts Dallas's Main Street facing east, two blocks east of the 1912 photo which follows below (one block today due to the diminishment of Exchange Pl, known at the time as Scollard Ct). The newly-constructed Praetorian building dominates the skyline, though its reign as Dallas's tallest building would be a short one.  Note the Imperial Bar building at its left, which survives in 2026 as the Uno Mas Tex Mex restaurant.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/Praetorian-postcard-001-full-card.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto\" alt=\"View down Main Street east of Akard Street in Dallas, circa 1909\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nMain Street at Akard, circa 1909\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nLooking east on Main Street, 1912\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThis snapshot records the view at the intersection of Dallas's Main and Field Streets in June of 1912, facing east.  The tall building on the right is the Southwestern Life Insurance Building, which was demolished in 1972.  The Praetorian building, demolished in 2013, can be seen as the light-colored building just left of center.  Today, Pegasus Plaza sits on the former Southwestern Life location, and the Praetorian building has been replaced by the \"Giant Eyeball.\"  This scene, captured on June 1, 1912, clearly shows not only the streetcar line that once extended along Main Street, but also the surface paving that existed at the time.\r\n<!-- June 1, 1912 -->\r\n<!-- https:\/\/texashistory.unt.edu\/ark:\/67531\/metapth806923\/m1\/129\/?q=beeman -->\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/Vintage-151.jpg\" style=\"max-height:540px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Looking east on Main Street in Dallas, 1912\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nLooking east on Main Street, June 1912\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nBill Hatch in front of the Southland Hotel, 1912\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nWe see here a street view of old Dallas, taken in 1912 in front of the long gone Southland Hotel.  The Southland was an eight-story structure located at 1200 Main Street downtown, and spanned a full block from Main to Commerce at Murphy Street.  The original Southland Hotel was not the same as the Southland Center (later the Adam's Mark Hotel and now the Sheraton), which was erected in 1959 on Olive Street.  Today the Metropolitan, a high-rise condominum complex, occupies the former site of the Southland, and Murphy Street survives only as a crosswalk and glorified walkway.\r\n\r\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:0\">\r\nI have no information on Bill Hatch other than his appearance in this photo, and his identification in handwriting on the back.\r\n<\/p>\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/Vintage-188.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto\" alt=\"Bill Hatch in front of the Southland Hotel in Dallas, 1912\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nBill Hatch in front of the Southland Hotel, 1912\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nBuick Automobile Co. building at Commerce and Poydras, 1913\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThis photo of the long, long gone Buick Automobile Company building at the corner of Dallas's Commerce and Poydras Streets dates to 1913.  Note that the signage still gives the building's pre-1911 street address of 238-40 Commerce Street.  The 1911 renumbering of Dallas city streets changed this address to 1008-10 Commerce, near where the McDonald's stands today.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/Vintage-145.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto\" alt=\"Buick Automotive Company building at Commerce and Poydras in Dallas, 1913\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nBuick Automobile Company in downtown Dallas, 1913\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nTrinity River flood waters, unknown date\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThe Trinity River has flooded many times since the founding of Dallas, and prior to its relocation (and straightening) in 1928, these floods would inevitably submerge the downtown and Oak Cliff areas of the city in water.  This unique snapshot depicts one such occurrence in the area near where the Dallas Farmers' Market is now located.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/Vintage-147.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto\" alt=\"Trinity River flooding in downtown Dallas, unknown date\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nTrinity River flood waters, pre-1928\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nSt. Louis Southwestern Railway platform, circa 1920s\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThis is one of a set of medium format film negatives chronicling a couple's travels around the state sometime during the 1920s.  A companion photo to this one shows a shorter woman standing in the same spot, presumably the person taking this photo given its slight upward angle. <!-- The couple's travels also include stops in Corpus Christi, Houston, and Austin. --> The location of this photo appears to be the platform adjacent to the St. Louis Southwestern Railway line, which ran along Lamar Street past Young, which is the street shown in the background.  The garage on the right is long gone, its location occupied today by a parking lot, and the old Perkins Dry Goods building, demolished in 2001, has given way to a multi-story parking structure.\r\n<!-- 1921 Sanborn map pg. 48 -->\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/Perkins-Dry-Goods-1930s.jpg\" style=\"max-height:540px; width:auto\" alt=\"St. Louis Southwestern Railway platform in Dallas, circa 1920s\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nSt. Louis Southwestern Railway platform, circa 1920s\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nHalborn Terrace Apartments, 1924\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThe Halborn Terrace apartment complex, located at the corner of Hall and Wellborn Streets in Dallas, was a building of twelve units designed in a Spanish architecture style.  An August 1924 newspaper ad characterized the units as \"situated in the most exclusive section of Oak Lawn and... handsomely furnished.\" This photo from May of that year captures the development during the late stages of construction, a sign boasting of the Murphy beds with which each unit was to be outfitted. The Centrum business center and residences occupy this location today. \r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/Vintage-210.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto\" alt=\"Halborn Terrace Apartments under construction in Dallas, 1924\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nHalborn Terrace Apartments under construction, 1924\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nE.M. Kahn &amp; Co. building, 1939\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nEmanuel Meyer Kahn's apparel store on the southeast corner of Elm and Lamar Streets was a Dallas fixture for over ninety years.  It was the city's first air-conditioned retail establishment, and at the time of its sale in 1969, it was the oldest one in Dallas.  Today the old Kahn's location makes up part of the large Bank of America complex, situated across the street from Rosa Parks Plaza.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Dallas-Streetcars\/2025-02-13-0001.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"E.M. Kahn &amp; Co. building in Dallas, 1939\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nE.M. Kahn &amp; Co. building, 1939\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nWill Rogers statue, circa 1950s\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThe Will Rogers statue outside Fort Worth's Memorial Center has long been a popular site for photos and selfies. I don't have a date for this particular image, but it likely hails from sometime in the 1950s.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/Vintage-Will-Rogers-statue-2.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Will Rogers statue in Fort Worth, likely 1950s\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nWill Rogers Statue in Fort Worth\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nCommerce at Field Street, 1952\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThis view of Commerce at S. Field Street in Dallas, facing east, is said to date to 1952. The area occupied by Texas State Optical and the Hertz Rent-A-Car is today taken up by the Exchange Food Hall, one of the latest in an ever-growing number of food and retail establishments that have decided they're too sophisticated to accept cash as payment. The Baker Hotel and Southland Life buildings in the distance have long since been replaced by the present-day AT&amp;T Headquarters.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/Vintage-115.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"View facing east on Commerce Street at Field Street in Dallas, 1952\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nView of Commerce at Field Street, 1952\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nThe \"triangle,\" 1950s\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThe \"triangle\" was an area of downtown Dallas bounded by Pacific Avenue, Harwood, and Live Oak Streets, extending all the way to Elm.  Today, Live Oak Street has its terminus at N. Harwood.  This photo comprises one half of a \"Stereo Realist\" set.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3962.jpg\" style=\"max-height:540px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt='The \"Triangle\" in downtown Dallas, 1950s'>\r\n<figcaption>\r\nDowntown Dallas's \"triangle,\" 1950s\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nHotel Dallas, 1955\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThe Jefferson Hotel, constructed in 1917 when Record Street was still known as Jefferson Street, was renamed to Hotel Dallas in 1953 and demolished in 1975.  This photo shows not only the hotel two years after its acquisition by Alsonett Hotels, but also one of the interurbans which once traversed the streets of the city.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Dallas-Streetcars\/Vintage-187.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto\" alt=\"View of Hotel Dallas, October 1955\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nHotel Dallas, 1955\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nGlendale shopping center, circa 1956\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThe Glendale Shopping Center opened in Oak Cliff in the mid-1950s, with the Food Mart grocery store following in November 1956.  In more recent times, the shopping center hosted a Family Dollar at the former Food Mart site, and it has been a target for potential redevelopment.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3865.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Glendale Shopping Center in Dallas, 1950s\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nGlendale shopping center, 1950s\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nMain Street, 1959\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThis Kodachrome slide captures a late 1950s view of Fort Worth's Main Street, facing northwest toward the Tarrant County Courthouse.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3957.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Main Street in Fort Worth, 1959\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nFort Worth's Main Street, 1959\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nRio Motor Hotel, 1959\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nFort Worth's 125-room Rio Motor Hotel opened for business in 1959 at 6600 Camp Bowie Blvd., then part of U.S. Highway 80.  The Rio originally offered twenty-four hour service and a private club.  Taco Cabana opened its first Tarrant County location on the old site in 1988.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3905.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Rio Motor Hotel in Fort Worth, 1959\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nRio Motor Hotel, 1959\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nMain Street at Exchange Place, 1960s\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThis 35mm film negative captures the view facing east on Dallas's Main Street near Exchange Place (historically known as Scollard Ct), near the Adolphus Hotel.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/2026-01-27-0002.jpg\" style=\"max-height:540px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Main Street at Exchange Place facing east, 1960s, near the Adolphus Hotel\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nMain at Exchange facing east, 1960s\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nFort Worth Public Library, 1960\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThe Art Deco-inspired Fort Worth Public Library building at Ninth and Throckmorton Streets opened in 1938, replacing the earlier Carnegie Public Library built in 1901 at the same location.  The 1938 building shown here was itself replaced in 1978 by a new central library building on Taylor Street, and it was demolished in 1990 in favor of a parking lot.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3888.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Fort Worth central library building, 1960\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nFort Worth central library building, 1960\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nView from Veterans Memorial Garden, 1960\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThis 1960 Kodachrome slide presents the view from the Veterans Memorial Garden at the corner of Dallas's Akard and Canton Streets, adjacent to what is today The Black Academy of Arts and Letters.  The orientation is facing toward the north, toward where the current Dallas City Hall building stands, with the Dallas Memorial Auditorium just out of frame to the west.  The 11.8 acre City Hall complex at 1500 Marilla Street, completed in 1978, completely transformed the look of this area.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3883.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"View from Veterans Memorial Garden in Dallas, 1960\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nView from Veterans Memorial Garden, 1960\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nHonest Joe's pawn shop, 1964\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\n\"Honest Joe\" Rubin Goldstein's pawn shop was a fixture in Deep Ellum for decades.  <!-- until 1985 -->  Today the original building survives as <a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/maps\/@32.7837593,-96.7881984,3a,55.3y,150.83h,95.98t\/data=!3m7!1e1!3m5!1sGzd4_bWAIC9by2uwHpAX7g!2e0!6shttps:%2F%2Fstreetviewpixels-pa.googleapis.com%2Fv1%2Fthumbnail%3Fcb_client%3Dmaps_sv.tactile%26w%3D900%26h%3D600%26pitch%3D-5.984289079245997%26panoid%3DGzd4_bWAIC9by2uwHpAX7g%26yaw%3D150.8310520695999!7i16384!8i8192?entry=ttu&g_ep=EgoyMDI2MDIyNS4wIKXMDSoASAFQAw%3D%3D\" target=\"_blank\">Urban Paws<\/a>, a dog boarding and daycare facility.  <a href=\"\r\nhttps:\/\/www.geocaching.com\/geocache\/GC6EGAV\" target=\"_blank\">The story of Honest Joe's<\/a> is worth a read for anyone interested in the history of the Ellum district.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3886.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Honest Joe's pawn shop in Deep Ellum, 1964\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nHonest Joe's pawn shop, 1964\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nKennedy assassination site, 1964\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThe infamous assassination site is seen here no more than four months after the event (the date stamped into the slide's cardboard mount is March 1964).  This particular view was reconstructed by Oliver Stone's crew for his 1991 film <i>JFK<\/i>.  While there are no shortage of photos, both period and contemporary, of this stretch of Elm Street, this one appeals to my inner road geek because it shows the original, pre-Interstate U.S. highway shields.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3867.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Kennedy assassination site, 1964\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nKennedy assassination site, 1964\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nAkard Street near Marilla, 1964\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThe view here is looking north at the intersection of Akard and (the now gone) Masonic Street in downtown Dallas, prior to the construction of the present-day City Hall complex.  The old Dixie Grill restaurant is visible at 525 S. Akard at the extreme left, and the National (formerly the First National Bank Tower), which opened for business in 1965, can be seen under construction as part of the skyline.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3903.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"View of Akard Street near Marilla, 1964\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nView of Akard Street near Marilla in Dallas, 1964\r\n<!-- March 1964 -->\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nJennings Avenue, 1964\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThe view here is from Jennings Avenue in Fort Worth, facing north toward W 10th Street.  The red building at 902 Jennings Ave. was the home of the housing standards offices and the Texas Employment Commision until both were moved to Texas Street.  The 902 Jennings building and the strip of businesses on the west side of the roadway were demolished, their places taken by the current municipal building and downtown public library.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3900.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Jennings Avenue in Fort Worth, 1964\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nJennings Avenue in Fort Worth, 1964\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nIdeal Movie Theatre fa\u00e7ade, Fort Worth, 1965\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nLocated at 1408-1410 Main Street, the Ideal Theatre opened in 1913 as the New Queen Theatre before being rechristened the Ideal Theatre more than a decade later and eventually closing down in 1960.  This block, along with the entire stretch of Main Street between 9th and W. Lancaster Avenue, were cleared to make way for the Fort Worth Convention Center and the Water Gardens.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3896.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Ideal Movie Theatre fa\u00e7ade in Fort Worth, 1965\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nIdeal Movie Theatre fa\u00e7ade, 1965\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nDallas City Hall, 1967\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThe Dallas Municipal Building at 106 S. Harwood functioned as the city's fourth, and longest-serving, City Hall until 1978, when local government relocated to the current location at 1500 Marilla Street.  This vintage Ektachrome slide captures the building as it neared its fifty-third year of use.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3746.jpg\" style=\"max-height:540px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Dallas City Hall (Municipal Building), 1967\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nDallas City Hall, 1967\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nMain Street at Houston Street in Dallas, 1967\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThe Texas Bank building, demolished in 1982 to make way for a parking garage, can be clearly scene in <a href=\"https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Motorcade_on_Main.jpg\" target=\"_blank\">a famous photo of the John F. Kennedy motorcade<\/a> taken shortly before his assassination four years earlier.  The vantage point of this 1967 Kodachrome slide is facing that motorcade route from the opposite direction.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3870.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; with:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Main Street at Houston Street in Dallas, facing east, 1967\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nMain and Houston Streets facing east, 1967\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nDallas-Fort Worth Turnpike toll plaza, 1968\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThe Dallas-Fort Worth Turnpike opened to traffic on August 27, 1957, serving as the fastest automotive connection between the two cities and reducing travel time between them by thirty minutes compared to the then-existing U.S. Highway 80. <!-- with its 45 signal lights -->  Initial cost for the complete trip was fifty cents.  The tolls were removed in late 1977, and the entire stretch of roadway was incorporated into the Eisenhower Interstate Highway system as today's Interstate 30.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3869.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Dallas-Fort Worth Turnpike toll plaza, 1968\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nDallas-Fort Worth Turnpike toll plaza, 1968\r\n<!-- June 10, 1968 -->\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nHeading eastbound out of Dallas, 1968\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThis photo was taken through the rear windshield of car departing downtown Dallas on U.S. Highway 67\/80 (<a href=\"https:\/\/www.google.com\/maps\/@32.7802653,-96.7787163,3a,75y,274.74h,77.63t\/data=!3m7!1e1!3m5!1s80pAmHB3RybSJYD_PAS3Iw!2e0!6shttps:%2F%2Fstreetviewpixels-pa.googleapis.com%2Fv1%2Fthumbnail%3Fcb_client%3Dmaps_sv.tactile%26w%3D900%26h%3D600%26pitch%3D12.365761181066802%26panoid%3D80pAmHB3RybSJYD_PAS3Iw%26yaw%3D274.73906805552815!7i16384!8i8192?entry=ttu&g_ep=EgoyMDI2MDEwNy4wIKXMDSoASAFQAw%3D%3D\" target=\"_blank\">present-day Interstate 30<\/a>).\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/Vintage-138.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto\" alt=\"Departing Dallas on future Interstate 30, 1968\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nDeparting Dallas, 1968\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nTexas School Book Depository Building, 1969\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nPhotos of the area surrounding the Kennedy assassination spot are so common as to be of relatively little interest to me, but on occasion one surfaces that has some appeal.  The view as seen in this 1969 Kodachrome slide, facing toward the building from the Grassy Knoll, is iconic, and, unlike the same view from this vantage point today, is largely unobscured by trees.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3911.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Texas School Book Depository Building as seen from the Grassy Knoll, 1969\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nTexas School Book Depository Building as seen from the Grassy Knoll, 1969\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nEntering downtown Dallas from Oak Cliff, 1971\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThis 1971 Kodachrome slide captures the view entering downtown Dallas from Oak Cliff via the Jefferson Blvd. viaduct.  Today, this cityscape has been ruined by the overbearing presence of the Omni Hotel.\r\n<!-- Jefferson Blvd Viaduct spilling out onto S Market St -->\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3879.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Entering downtown Dallas via the Jefferson Blvd. viaduct, 1971\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nEntering downtown Dallas via the Jefferson Blvd. viaduct, 1971\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nReunion Tower, 1980\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThis Kodachrome image of Dallas's Reunion Tower ascending into the dusk dates to 1980, two years after the tower's completion and opening to the public.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3850.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Reunion Tower in Dallas, 1980\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nReunion Tower, 1980\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nGay pride parade, early 1980s\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nDallas's first gay pride parade took place in 1972, the second following eight years later and kicking off what has since become an annual tradition.  These two images depict scenes from the parade's original route on Elm Street downtown and date to 1980 or early in that decade.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/Vintage-203.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Dallas Gay Pride parade, early 1980s\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nDallas Gay Pride parade, early 1980s\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/Vintage-200.jpg\" style=\"max-height:540px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Dallas Gay Pride parade, early 1980s\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nDallas Gay Pride parade, early 1980s\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nBilly Bob's marquee, 1983\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThis 1983 photo captures the view facing north on N. Main near 27th Street, providing a period glimpse of bookings at Billy Bob's two years after its opening inside the Fort Worth Stockyards.  Note also the billboard advertising cigarettes, a practice which has been banned in the U.S. since 1998.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/Vintage-211.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Billy Bob's marquee, 1983\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nBilly Bob's marquee, 1983\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nDallas North Tollway construction, 1985\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThis 1985 slide records two different construction projects near Spring Valley Road in Addison &ndash; the Dallas North Tollway, which hadn't yet been fully extended past LBJ Freeway, and the Providence Towers complex alongside it.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3909.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Dallas North Tollway construction in Addison, 1985\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nDallas North Tollway construction, 1985\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nNorthbound Central Expressway, 1990\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThis Seattle FilmWorks slide records Central Expressway in its pre-widened state, just south of Northwest Highway.  By the time I got my first driver's license four years later, this stretch of roadway was under heavy construction.\r\n\r\n<!--\r\n<p style=\"margin-bottom:0; color:blue\">\r\nAs a side note, I remember being sent two rolls of this Seattle Film Works slide film in the mid 1990s as part of a solicitation.  I never used the film and ultimately discarded it some twenty-five years later as long out of date.  In the mid 2020s, seeing how poorly slides taken on this stock have aged, I'm grateful that I never availed myself of the Seattle FilmWorks offer.  The image as presented here has had significant post scanning corrections.\r\n<\/p>\r\n-->\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3955.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"View of northbound Central Expressway in Dallas, 1990\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nNorthbound Central Expressway, 1990\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<h2>\r\nRail yard and White Swan building, 1990\r\n<\/h2>\r\n\r\nThe White Swan building at 2200 N Lamar, home of the longtime coffee and tea company, was erected in 1926.  The railyard area abutting White Swan was, decades later, retooled into Victory Park, and the White Swan building itself was repurposed as the House of Blues in 2007.\r\n\r\n<figure style=\"text-align:center\">\r\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"\/images\/blog-images\/Vintage-Photos\/Vintage-DFW-2\/3873.jpg\" style=\"max-height:480px; width:auto; border:1px solid darkgray\" alt=\"Railyard and White Swan building in Dallas, 1990\">\r\n<figcaption>\r\nRailyard and White Swan building, 1990\r\n<\/figcaption>\r\n<\/figure>\r\n\r\n\r\n<\/div>\r\n\r\n\r\n<div id=\"BlogFooter\">\r\n<hr>\r\nAll original material on this page is &copy; 2026 Peter Orozco (all rights reserved).\r\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Here is another selection of rare and mostly one-of-a-kind photos of the Dallas-Fort Worth area, drawn from my personal collection of prints, slides, and film negatives. C.H. Edwards' Music House, 1890s Charles Hodge Edwards moved to Dallas in the 1870s and opened a piano store at 407 Main Street. He set up shop in at [&hellip;]","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"wprm-recipe-roundup-name":"","wprm-recipe-roundup-description":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[52,166,159,51,162],"tags":[53,192,136,54],"class_list":["post-1095","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-dallas","category-fort-worth","category-historical","category-photography","category-vintage","tag-dfw-landmarks","tag-fort-worth","tag-local-history","tag-photography"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>DFW in vintage photos, take II - PAO Productions Blog<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/paoprod.com\/blog\/2026\/03\/13\/dfw-in-vintage-photos-take-ii\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"DFW in vintage photos, take II - PAO Productions Blog\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Here is another selection of rare and mostly one-of-a-kind photos of the Dallas-Fort Worth area, drawn from my personal collection of prints, slides, and film negatives. C.H. Edwards&#039; Music House, 1890s Charles Hodge Edwards moved to Dallas in the 1870s and opened a piano store at 407 Main Street. 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