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Hyde Park Presbyterian Church is a historic church at 3915 Ave. B in Austin, Texas. It was built in 1896 and added to the National Register in 1990.
Hyde Park is a neighborhood and historic district in Austin, Texas. Located in Central Austin, Hyde Park is defined by 38th Street to the south, 45th Street to the north, Duval Street to the east, and Guadalupe Street to the west. It is situated just north of the University of Texas and borders the neighborhoods of Hancock and North Loop. [2]
Hyde Park High School is a ministry of Hyde Park Baptist Church in Austin, Texas. The High School is located at 11400 N. Mopac, Austin, Texas. Enrollment generally runs from 200 to 300 students. It moved to this location in the fall of 2009. Before this time it was located at 3901 Speedway with the Elementary and Middle School campuses.
The building was completed by Monroe M. Shipe, founder of Hyde Park, in 1892. It uses an eclectic combination of styles, including a Stick style form, Queen Anne decorations, and a flat concrete roof. [1] Shipe platted the entire neighborhood of Hyde Park, and designated the few blocks near his home to be a subdivision he called "Shadowlawn."
Hyde Park Presbyterian Church (Texas) L. LifeAustin Church; S. St. David's Episcopal Church (Austin, Texas) U. University Baptist Church (Austin, Texas)
Nov. 21—An Austin church will soon be coming down and for many within the church, it's an answered prayer. Living Bible Church, which has been on the market to be sold for the better part of two ...
This subdivision was platted by Hyde Park founder Monroe M. Shipe and indicated by concrete markers, some of which still stand today. Shipe's own home is located at the corner of 39th Street and Avenue G. The district was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1990. [2]
The neighborhood was named after Hyde Park, London. [20] Shipe's streetcar line made Hyde Park a streetcar suburb, a major factor in the development's early success. [13] While many neighborhoods of Austin at the time were racially integrated, Hyde Park was not only majority white but marketed by Shipe as a "whites only" neighborhood. [21]