Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The park opened on March 18, 1972. [5] The 35 acres (14 ha) site was located in north Arlington off Interstate 30 near Six Flags Over Texas and adjacent to Arlington Stadium. The park lost almost half a million dollars in 1972, 1973 and 1974 and after the 1975 season, the animals were sold. The park reopened for the 1976 season as Hawaii Kai.
The school is a part of Arlington Independent School District and serves students in grades 9 through 12 in southeast Arlington and southwest Grand Prairie. [1] Bowie High competes in Class 6A within the University Interscholastic League that governs interschool athletic, artistic, and academic competition in Texas.
1957: First class to graduate from AHS on Park Row Dr. 1958: Former AHS reopens as Ousley Junior High, 8th grade only. 1963: Last class to graduate when Arlington High was the city’s only high school. Sam Houston High School opens in fall 1963. Sam Houston, AISD's second high school, opened in the eastern part of Arlington in the Fall of 1963.
Meadowbrook Park opens as the first park in Arlington. [13] Eastern Star Home is built to provide a home for aged and infirm members of the Eastern Star Organization in Texas at 1201 E. Division. [15] 1925 - Hugh Moore becomes mayor of Arlington for a year. [37] 1926 map of Arlington. 1926 – Elmer L. Taylor becomes mayor for a year. [38]
Green Oaks Boulevard is a 22.7-mile-long (36.5 km) loop road, located almost entirely in the city of Arlington, in the U.S. state of Texas.Green Oaks Boulevard creates a loop around Arlington, traveling from State Highway 360 (SH 360) at Kingswood Boulevard, then runs west, north, and east back to SH 360 at Carrier Parkway, creating a backwards c shape.
College Park Center (CPC) is an indoor, multi-purpose arena on the University of Texas at Arlington campus in Arlington, Texas, United States. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] It seats up to 7,000 spectators. Its primary tenant is the Mavericks athletic department including the university's basketball and volleyball teams.
Longmeadow's village green was laid out in the early 18th century, and it is the area around which the town center developed. It is located on a sandy ridge on a terrace about 1 mile (1.6 km) east of the Connecticut River, with a flood plain in between that now also carries Interstate 91.
Longmeadow Street, located on a terrace above that plain, was from an early date the principal north-south route on the east side of the river, and the town's principal thoroughfare. In the 19th century, the quarrying of brownstone became a major industry, prompting a shift in population away from the river and toward the quarries further east.