Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Location of Dallas County in Texas. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Dallas County, Texas. This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Dallas County, Texas. There are 35 districts, 113 individual properties, and three former ...
Little Egypt was an African-American community in Texas which was founded after the Civil War and continued until the sale of the land in 1962. The roughly thirty-five acre neighborhood was located within Dallas city limits, north of Northwest Highway. [1] [2] Large homes and the Northlake Shopping Center currently occupy the site. [1]
The church was built in 1872 and was located at Bryan and Ervay Streets, near present-day St. Paul Station. [1] In 1890, Dallas was established as a diocese, and Sacred Heart became the diocesan cathedral of Dallas with Bishop Thomas Brennan acting as the first bishop.
After the 1952 Coup d'Etat in Egypt, the Egyptian Economy began to stagnate, and more and more young Egyptians began seeking opportunities to study and work abroad. [5] In 1964, as the number of Copts grew in the United States, the first Coptic lay organization in the United States, the Coptic American Association (CAA) was founded.
Oak Cliff Methodist Church [55] 541-49 E. Jefferson Boulevard Oak Lawn Methodist Church [56] 3014 Oak Lawn Avenue Old City Hall [57] 106 S. Harwood Street 1978 municipal Old Parkland Hospital [58] 3819 Maple Avenue commercial Old Tige [59] 3801 Parry Avenue cultural Palace Blacksmith Shop [60] 2814 Main Street commercial Phyllis Wheatley School ...
San Felipe Church: San Felipe: 1837 It served as a town hall, school, Masonic hall, and continues to serve as a Methodist church. Anderson House: San Augustine: 1838 Columbus Cartwright House: San Augustine: 1838 Michel B. Menard House: Galveston: 1838 The home of Galveston's founder, Michel B. Menard, and the oldest surviving building in the city.
Churches in Dallas (1 C, 18 P) Pages in category "Religious buildings and structures in Dallas" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total.
Central Congregational Church (now known as City Church International) is a historic church building at 1530 N. Carroll in Dallas, Texas. The late Gothic Revival church building was constructed in 1920 for the Central Congregational Church congregation before it moved to another location.