Friday, October 9, 2009 , Updated
Historic South Dallas neighborhood to get clean-up from community
Councilwoman Carolyn R. Davis, 2000 Roses Foundation, Inc. and Preservation Dallas will host a Community Clean-up of the Tenth Street Historical District on Saturday, October 10 from 8 a.m. - noon. The clean-up will start at 1130 E. Ninth Street.
The Tenth Street neighborhood is located on the southeastern edge of Oak Cliff. Its development may date back to the post-Civil War era when freed slaves settled in the area. While no buildings from the 1840s exist, evidence of a community survives in the Oak Cliff Cemetery, the city’s oldest public cemetery established in 1846 by William Beaty. The neighborhood is bounded by E. 8th Street to the north, Moore St. to the east, E. Claredon Drive to the south, and I35 on the west.
The Tenth Street neighborhood is considered Oak Cliff’s most important African-American neighborhood. It is made up primarily of simple wood frame houses that generally do not reference any specific architectural style. There are some Craftsman Bungalows and fewer Victorian houses. Several folk houses may be found including shotguns, double shotguns, “L-plans,” and at least one example of the camelback and saddlebag forms.
The sloping terrain and varying lot sizes contribute to Tenth Street’s unique setting. East Tenth Street, the neighborhood’s commercial and social area, runs through the middle of the neighborhood at a lower elevation than most of Oak Cliff. Unlike the rest of the district’s development, which is dictated by a rigid grid, blocks and lots on E. Tenth Street were different sizes and shapes to accommodate the many commercial and institutional buildings interspersed with houses. The City of Dallas designated the Tenth Street Historic District in 1993. The following year, the National Register listed the neighborhood, recognizing it at a local level in the area of ethnic heritage.
In 2002 Preservation Dallas, along with the City of Dallas and private donors, restored Vivian Bush’s home on East 11th Street, demonstrating proper historical restoration techniques to the neighborhood. Recently, in 2006, several houses have been remodeled according to appropriate historic guidelines. The Tenth Street neighborhood is an important tie to Dallas’s rich history, and efforts will continue to restore and revive the neighborhood.
Please contact Katina Johnson with the City of Dallas at 214-671-8057 for more information on the Clean-Up and Preservation Dallas at 214-821-3290 with any questions regarding historic preservation of this neighborhood.
Source: City of Dallas
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alexander troup, says:
I can recall what 10th street looked like the 1970's and then over 3 decades that community feel into what you see today...While the freeway made such a divide not only for the old community, but cut off the old Village of Hord's Ridge of the 1840's that was located by the Zoo...
42 Landmarks or more have thus gone to the wayside and so there it is, while it was once a nice Victorian community in the 1950's...The Joe Kovandvich Concret house is really the most important landmark today on Eads street..A/T.. Urban Historian..
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