Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kiest Park is a 263-acre (106 ha) park in southern Dallas, Texas, United States, established in 1931 by Edwin John Kiest, publisher of the Dallas Times Herald and a member of the Dallas Park Board in the 1930s who donated the land for the park. Named in memory of Kiest's late wife, artist Elizabeth Patterson Kiest, it is the largest City of ...
The Cotton Bowl Indoor tennis tournament was originally played on indoor courts at the Fair Park Recreation Building, [4] from December 28 to December 31, 1957. [5]The tournament is sponsored by the Cotton Bowl Council and Dallas Tennis Association, in collaboration with the Dallas Park and Recreation Department.
The park now covers the history of Lowell's textile mills and the workers who worked and lived in the city. [141] Lyndon B. Johnson: Texas: 1,571.71 acres (6.3605 km 2) President Lyndon B. Johnson spent much of his life here in the Hill Country, where visitors can tour his reconstructed birthplace, boyhood home, and ranch. The still-working ...
The portion in Dallas between Loop 12 and Mountain Creek Parkway (near Dallas Baptist University) is officially designated Kiest Boulevard, and it also passes over the Mountain Creek Lake Bridge (however, the stretch between Mountain Creek Parkway and SE 14th Street, which is the location of the bridge, is not part of the Spur).
This page was last edited on 10 October 2023, at 10:50 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Elmwood began as the Tennessee Dairy founded by Lindsley Waters in 1907. With just 20 cows and covering 640 acres (2.6 km 2), the dairy was a corporate operation and a modern facility that was the first in Dallas to deliver pasteurized milk in glass bottles, [2] even winning "most sanitary dairy farm" at the 1908 State Fair of Texas. [3]
Kiest station is a DART light rail station in Dallas, Texas. It serves the Oak Cliff neighborhood on Kiest Boulevard and Lancaster Road ( SH 342 ). It opened on May 31, 1997, and is a station on the Blue Line , serving nearby residences and businesses.
The following are some of the senior high schools located within the district. [1] Schools are located in the city of Dallas unless otherwise stated. Classifications are based on their classes in football for the 2022-23 alignment by the University Interscholastic League, a state entity for academic and athletic competition among public schools.