Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
During the 1930s Reeder worked in London and Paris - in the latter city he studied abstraction under Aleksandra Ekster. After getting married in New York, Reeder and his wife moved back to Fort Worth in 1940. In 1945 the Reeder School of Theater and Design for Children was opened.
Flora Blanc Reeder (November 14, 1916 – September 26, 1995) was an American drama teacher and painter. She was the director of the Reeder Children's School of Theater and Design in Fort Worth, Texas. As a painter she was a member of the Fort Worth Circle, a group of artists active in the 1940s and 1950s.
Fisher Body's beginnings trace back to a horse-drawn carriage shop in Norwalk, Ohio, in the late 1800s. Lawrence P. Fisher (1852 Peru, Ohio – 1921, Norwalk, Ohio) and his wife Margaret Theisen (1857 Baden , Germany – 1936 Detroit, Michigan) had a large family of eleven children; seven were sons who would become part of the Fisher Body ...
Tim McDowell was working in construction when he got a free haircut in 1977 and liked what he saw. Forty-five years later, his salon has won our Readers’ Choice poll.
The Fort Worth Museum of Science and History is located on 1600 Gendy Street, Fort Worth, Texas 76107 in the city's Cultural District. It was opened in 1945 as the Fort Worth Children's Museum and moved to its current location in 1954. In 1968, the museum adopted its current name. [1]
Boot Barn added 44 stores in the past 12 months, to a total of 333 in 41 states (including more than a dozen in Dallas-Fort Worth). A decade ago, Boot Barn had only 88 stores, none of them east of ...
First-generation Chevrolet Silverado 2500HD (2001–02 Regular Cab) The GMT800 Silverado/Sierra 1500 and 2500 pickup trucks were released in August 1998 as 1999 models. The "classic" light-duty GMT400 C/K trucks continued to be produced for the first two years alongside the new models, and the Heavy-Duty GMT400 pickups (alongside the GMT400 SUVs) were continued until 2000, with the new GMT800 ...
Greenwood Memorial Park at White Settlement Road and Boland Street in Fort Worth, Texas, has been a perpetual care commercial cemetery since its dedication in 1909. The Mount Olivet Corporation, a non-profit organization was founded by the Bailey family of Fort Worth. The organization is overseen by a local elected board of trustees.