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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.
Civic Center District: Mixed Dallas Arts District: Mixed Dallas Farmers Market: Mixed Deep Ellum: Mixed Design District: Mixed Main Street District: Mixed Reunion District: Commercial Riverfront District: Mixed South Side: Mixed Thanksgiving Commercial Center: Commercial Uptown: Mixed Victory Park: Mixed West End Historic District: Mixed
The City Center District is an area in north-central downtown Dallas, Texas . It lies south of the Arts District, north of the Main Street District, northwest of Deep Ellum, southwest of Bryan Place and east of the West End Historic District. The district contains a large concentration of downtown commercial space which prior to 1950 had been ...
Dealey Plaza / ˈ d iː l iː / is a city park in the West End Historic District of downtown Dallas, Texas.It is sometimes called the "birthplace of Dallas". It was also the location of the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963.
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.
It opened on June 14, 1996, [3] and is a station on the Red, Blue, Green, and Orange lines, serving the West End Marketplace, Dallas Alley, the Dallas World Aquarium and Zoo, the Sixth Floor Museum (in the Texas School Book Depository), Dealey Plaza, the Old Red Courthouse with its Dallas Visitors Center and El Centro College and is within ...
Coe was co-editor of fellow evangelist Gordon Lindsay's Voice of Healing magazine until 1950, when he began his own magazine, the Herald of Healing. By 1956 its circulation was approximately 250,000. [8] Coe also opened a children's orphanage [9] and built a large church building known as the Dallas Revival Center. [10]