Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
After a decade of development and community soul-searching, the Museum opened on Presidents' Day, February 20, 1989., [5] The Sixth Floor Exhibit opened as a response to the many visitors who come to Dealey Plaza to learn more about the assassination. The museum was founded by the Dallas County Historical Foundation. [6]
Also known as the "Old Red Courthouse", it is constructed of Pecos red sandstone and Little Rock blue granite. The three-story building features two 118-foot (36 m) columns of Texas granite at each of the four entrances with a central 118-foot (36 m) main column. The building now houses the Old Red Museum of Dallas County History & Culture.
Kidderminster station opened with the extension of the Oxford, Worcester & Wolverhampton Railway from Worcester to Stourbridge on 1 May 1852. It became an important intermediate station on the line which became part of the West Midland Railway in 1860, which in turn amalgamated with the Great Western Railway and the South Wales Railway on 1 August 1863.
The West End Historic District of Dallas, Texas, is a historic district that includes a 67.5-acre (27.3 ha) area in northwest downtown, generally north of Commerce, east of I-35E, west of Lamar and south of the Woodall Rodgers Freeway.
The Dallas Downtown Historic District is a 555-acre (225 ha) area in downtown Dallas, Texas, United States that was designated a historic district in 2006 and expanded in 2009 to preserve the diverse architectural history of the area.
The Santa Fe Terminal Complex is an 18-acre (73,000 m 2) complex of historic buildings in the Government District of downtown Dallas, Texas ().Constructed in 1924 as the headquarters for the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway and the Southwest's largest merchandising center, three of the original four buildings remain today and have been renovated into various uses.
Pauline Periwinkle and Progressive Reform in Dallas. College Station: University of Texas A&M Press. ISBN 978-0890968000. Mims, Dennis M. "A Queer History of Dallas: the Formation, Development, and Integration of Big D’s LGBT Community, 1965-2005" (PhD. Diss. U Texas-Dallas 2019) online. Minutaglio, Bill; Davis, Steven L. (2013). Dallas 1963 ...
The ICR Discovery Center for Science & Earth History is a creationist museum [1] in Dallas, Texas. Owned and operated by the Institute for Creation Research, [2] [3] the museum opened on September 2, 2019, [4] with 1,600 people visiting on its first day. [5] The museum cost $37.8 million.