|
Dallas redirects here. For other uses see Dallas (disambiguation)
|
Dallas skyline as seen from Reunion Tower
|
|
Dallas skyline as seen from north of Woodall Rodgers Freeway
|
|
The Dallas, Texas flag
|
Dallas is one of the ten largest cities in the United
States and the heart of the largest metropolitan area in Texas. It is the county seat
of Dallas County and small portions of the city also
extend into the neighboring counties of Collin County,
Denton County, Rockwall County, and Kaufman County.
Dallas is the largest city of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, a large metropolitan area in North Texas. As of the 2000 census, Dallas had a total population of 1,188,580.
The Dallas-Fort Worth consolidated metropolitan area (locally known as the Metroplex) had a population of 5,222,000.
Dallas was founded in 1841. While Dallas County was established three years later in
1844 and was named after George
M. Dallas, who was the United States Vice President at the time and supported Texas' annexation, the origin of the city's name is
debatable. Dallas was so called by its residents at least as early as 1843. There are four
theories as to the origin of the city's name; it was named:
- after George Dallas;
- after George Dallas' brother Commodore Alexander James Dallas, who was stationed in the Gulf of Mexico and was the U. S.
Treasury Secretary around the end of the War of 1812;
- in a town-naming contest in 1842;
- after the friend of the son of Dallas' founder, John Neely Bryan, whose son later stated that his father had said he had named it "after my friend
Dallas" a person whose identity is not certain.
The crime rate has been ranked first in the country's largest cities from 1998-2003. While most areas are peaceful, certain
neighborhoods are avoided after dusk; these are downtown, near large tourist attractions, as well as sections of south Oak Cliff near the Dallas Zoo, and neighborhoods around Fair Park and south Dallas.
A nuclear submarine, the USS Dallas, was named after the city by
the U.S. Navy.
Geography and Climate
According to the United States Census
Bureau, the city has a total area of 997.1 km˛ (385.0 mi˛). 887.2 km˛ (342.5 mi˛) of it is land and 110.0 km˛ (42.5 mi˛) of it is water.
The total area is 11.03% water.
Dallas, as is the surrounding area, is mostly flat and lies at an elevation ranging from 450 to 550 feet. An escarpment rises
another 200 feet in southern Dallas in the neighborhoods of Oak
Cliff and Cockrell Hill, Texas and continues through the city of
Cedar Hill.
A simulated-color satellite image of Dallas and Fort Worth, Texas, taken by NASA's Landsat 7 satellite. Dallas makes up the right
half of the urbanized area.
The Trinity River is a major Texas river that
passes from the northwest right by the southern portion of downtown Dallas as it heads southeast to Houston. The river is flanked on both sides with a 50 foot earthen levee to keep that part of the city from
flooding. Several bridges traverse the river connecting southern Dallas to downtown Dallas. Businesses and businessmen, like Belo
and Ross Perot, Jr., have pushed in recent years to build a multi-million-dollar, landmark bridge over the river and convert that
section of the river into a park area with nearby commercial and retail services somewhat similar to the River Walk in San Antonio or Townlake in Austin. Some proponents claim this development would bring more life, commerce, revenue and lower crime to
downtown Dallas and poorer, southern Dallas. Some critics charge the project is a facade to serve special, financial interests of
businessmen. Residents barely approved a bond proposal in 1998 to fund the Trinity River Project
and work has progressed slowly towards implementing it. Ron Kirk, Dallas' first
African-American mayor, championed the project during his term as
mayor as he did the new American Airlines Center in
downtown. His successor, mayor Laura Miller--sometimes referred to as
Dallas' first reform mayor--won the vacancy left by Kirk when he ran for the U.S. Senate. Miller won in part based on her
platform she would focus on the city's basic needs like roads and other infrastructure and city employees' pay: services some
claimed were neglected at the cost of special projects like the American Airlines Center.
White Rock Lake is Dallas' other significant water feature. The lake and surrounding park is a popular destination in the Lake
Highlands/Casa Linda neighborhoods for boaters, joggers, bikers, skaters and for related activities. The lake also boasts the
66-acre Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Garden on its shore.
Dallas lies near the bottom of a tornado region that runs through the prairie
lands of the midwest. In the spring, cool fronts moving from Canada collide with warm, humid air streaming in from the Gulf
Coast. When these fronts meet over Dallas, severe storms are generated with spectacular lightning shows, torrents of rain,
large hail and, at times, tornados.
Dallas gets about 30 inches of rain per year, much of which is delivered in the spring time. The climate of Dallas is
classified a humid subtropical climate, yet this part of Texas also tends to get hot, dry winds from the north
and west in the summer. In the winter, the winds are cool, which can cause the region to fall below freezing occasionally. An
inch of snow for a day or two falls about once each winter, and about every other winter the cool air from the north and the
humid air from the south lead to freezing rain, which usually causes the city to come to a screeching halt for a day or two if
the roads and highways become dangerously slick. Regardless, winters are relatively mild compared to the Texas Panhandle and
other states to the north. Dallas winters are occasionally interspersed with indian summers.
Spring and fall and the pleasant, moderate temperatures accompanying those seasons are somewhat short-lived in Dallas. However
short the season is, residents and visitors appreciate the beauty of the vibrant wildflowers (such as the bluebonnet, indian
paintbrush and other flora) which bloom in spring and are planted around the highways
throughout Texas. In the spring the weather can also be quite volatile and change quickly in a matter of minutes. The cliche
about volatile climates popular in various parts of the U.S.--"if you don't like the weather, wait a little while and it'll
change"--applies well to Dallas' spring weather. Many consider autumn, around late September and October, to be the best time to
visit the Metroplex. Yet many events are also scheduled for more volatile season in spring.
Ongoing comparisons are made between Dallas' summer weather and Houston's. Texans generally agree Houston is significantly
more humid and Dallas is slightly hotter, although given Houston's humidity it may have a higher heat index than Dallas.
Demographics
As of the census of 2000, there are 1,188,580
people, 451,833 households, and 266,581 families residing in the city. The population density is 1,339.7/km˛ (3,469.9/mi˛). There are 484,117 housing units at an average density
of 545.7/km˛ (1,413.3/mi˛). The racial makeup of the city is 50.83% White, 25.91% African American, 0.54% Native American, 2.70%
Asian, 0.05% Pacific Islander, 17.24% from other races, and 2.72% from two or more races.
35.55% of the population are Hispanic or Latino of any race. As Mexicans flood into southern Dallas along the
I-35 corridor through Laredo, Texas and San Antonio, Hispanics
outnumbered African-Americans for the first time in the 2000 census as the largest minority group in Dallas.
There are 451,833 households out of which 30.3% have children under the age of 18 living with them, 38.8% are married couples
living together, 14.9% have a female householder with no husband present, and 41.0% are non-families. 32.9% of all households are
made up of individuals and 6.5% have someone living alone who is 65 years of age or older. The average household size is 2.58 and
the average family size is 3.37.
In the city the population is spread out with 26.6% under the age of 18, 11.8% from 18 to 24, 35.3% from 25 to 44, 17.7% from
45 to 64, and 8.6% who are 65 years of age or older. The median age is 30 years. For every 100 females there are 101.6 males. For
every 100 females age 18 and over, there are 100.5 males.
The median income for a household in the city is $37,628, and the median income for a family is $40,921. Males have a median
income of $31,149 versus $28,235 for females. The per capita income for the city is $22,183. 17.8% of the population and 14.9% of
families are below the poverty line. Out of the total people living in poverty, 25.1% are under the age of 18 and 13.1% are 65 or
older.
For a list of surrounding cities and towns, see:
Economy
The Dallas/Fort Worth area is called "Texas' Silicon Valley". Also, there are more than 40,000 telecommunication employees in
the "Telecom Corridor" housing such companies as Southwestern
Bell, AT&T, Alcatel, DSC Communications, Ericsson, Fujitsu, MCI, Nortel Networks, Rockwell, and Sprint. Central Dallas is supported by more than 100 miles
of fiber optic cable. According to the Dallas Women's Covenant, there are more than 81,000 women-owned firms in metropolitan
Dallas.
Although the Telecom industry was hit hard in the latest recession, most businesses in Dallas performed better on average than
other regional economies.
Major companies based in and around Dallas
Companies based in the Dallas city limits:
AMR Corporation (parent company of American Airlines),
Burlington Northern Santa Fe
Railway, FUNimation, Radio
Shack, and Pier 1 Imports
are based in Fort Worth. id Software is based in Mesquite. ExxonMobil, Michael's Stores, and Zale Corporation are headquartered in Irving. Electronic Data Systems,
Frito Lay, Dr Pepper and JCPenney are headquartered in Plano. Educational Products, Inc. is headquartered in Carrollton. Sabre Holdings, the owner of Sabre Systems, is headquartered in Southlake. Daisytek is headquartered in Allen.
Halliburton Energy Services was once based in Dallas, but moved to
Houston in 2003.
Transportation
Airports
Dallas is served by two commercial airports: Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (known as DFW International) and Dallas Love Field. In addition, Dallas Executive Airport (formerly Redbird Airport), is
a general aviation airport located within the city limits, and
Addison Airport is another general aviation airport located just outside the city limits in the suburb of Addison. Two more general aviation airports are located in the outer suburb
of McKinney, and on the west side of the Metroplex, two general
aviation airports are located in Fort Worth.
DFW International
Airport is located in the suburbs north of and equidistant to downtown Fort Worth and downtown Dallas. In terms of size, DFW
is the largest airport in the state, the second largest in the United States, and third largest in the world. In terms of
traffic, DFW is the busiest in the state, fourth busiest in the United States, and sixth busiest in the world. DFW is also home
base to American Airlines, the world's largest airline.
Love Field is located within the city limits of Dallas, 6 miles northwest of
downtown, and is headquarters to Southwest Airlines. Under the
Federal "Wright Amendment" and "Shelby Amendment" laws, no large jet air service is allowed from Dallas Love Field to any point
beyond Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas,
Oklahoma, New Mexico, Kansas, Mississippi, and Alabama. As such, Southwest and Continental Express are the only major airlines flying out of that airport. Ongoing efforts to relax or
abandon these restrictions have not succeeded so far. (See Love Field Airport
for a history of the Wright Amendment.)
Trains and Buses
Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) is the Dallas
area public transportation company, providing buses, rail, and HOV lanes. DART began
operating the first light rail system in Texas (and the Southwest United States) in 1996 and continues to expand its coverage. It remained the only light rail system in Texas until Houston opened its light rail system in 2004. Fort
Worth's smaller public transit system connects with Dallas' via a commuter rail line connecting downtown Dallas with downtown
Fort Worth and several points in between. However, most people in the Metroplex still choose to drive their vehicles rather than
take public transportation.
Freeways and Tollways
See List of Dallas Freeways for detailed
information on each freeway, such as official name, route, and termination points.
|
|
- Texas 114 (state highways are known as SH 114, etc.)
- Texas 121
- Texas 161
- Texas 183
- Texas 190 (the free frontage roads of the President George Bush Turnpike)
- Texas 360
- Texas Loop 12
- Texas Spur 97 (toll)
- Texas Spur 280
- Texas Spur 366 (Woodall Rodgers Freeway)
- Texas Spur 408
- Texas Spur 482
- Dallas North Tollway (toll)
- President George Bush Turnpike (toll) (its frontage roads are signed as Texas 190)
|
People of Dallas
Dallasites are said to consider themselves more sophisticated than those in other parts of Texas, especially Fort Worth.
Because of the economic prowess of the region, many who live there had come from other U.S. states or countries worldwide.
Dallasites eat out about four times every week, which is the third highest rate in the country. Dallas has four times the number
of restaurants per person than New York City. Dallasites are very fond of their local teams especially "America's Team", the
Dallas Cowboys. The Cowboys are well loved by the locals, even after many lackluster or losing seasons, and even if another local
team is a leader in its sport. Sports calendars and other memorabilia are very common, and on Sundays people tend to watch sports
games on television.
Because Dallas and Houston are the two major economic centers of Texas, they enjoy
a friendly rivalry. The two cities or selected characteristics of them are often compared. Even the adult industry is compared.
Houston has the lead, but both have a strong show of billboards and venues.
Famous People raised in Dallas
Education
The city of Dallas is also home to several institutions of higher learning, including:
Religion
Dallas is located in the "Bible Belt", because of the large Protestant influence on the community. Many places do not serve alcohol, and Baptist churches dot the maps. Fish emblems are seen on car trunks, and many local Christian radio stations and television stations are on the airwaves. Residents who wish
to drink alcohol must get a "unicard" in order to be served a beer or a margarita. Despite all of this, the divorce rate in the
region is 50% higher than the national average. As with large cities, the city has Catholics, Jews, Muslims, and other groups
inside the city.
Media and Journalism
List of Radio & Television Stations
List of Newspapers
- Auto Revista
- Daily
Commercial Record
- Dallas
Business Journal
- Dallas Morning News, The
- Quick
produced by The Dallas Morning News
- Dallas Observer
- Dallas Times
- Dallas Voice
- Dallas/Fort Worth Heritage Online
- Texas
Catholic
- WeTellAll.com
Also, the Fort Worth-Star Telegram is based in Fort Worth, Texas, and the Northside People and Park Cities People are based in other Dallas surburbs.
Mayors
See: List of Dallas Mayors
Sports
Dallas is home to:
all three of which play at the American Airlines
Center, and
who play in the Cotton Bowl but will be moving to
Frisco in 2005.
Historical Events
- 1841 - Dallas is founded.
- 1903 - Dallas annexes town of Oak Cliff on the south side of the Trinity River,
expanding its size by a third.
- October 19, 1917 - Love Field is created.
- 1927 - Love Field is opened for civilian use.
- 1927 - The world's first convenience store is opened in Dallas by the Southland Ice Company, which will eventually become 7-Eleven.
- 1930 - C.M. Joiner strikes oil 100 miles northeast of Dallas. Dallas became a
center of commerce for the Texas oil trade.
- 1930 - Bonnie and Clyde
meet in the Oak Cliff neighborhood of Dallas and begin their crime spree across Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana.
- 1934 - The criminal duo Bonnie and Clyde are buried in Dallas after being killed by police in Louisiana.
- 1958 - While working for Texas Instruments, Jack Kilby created the world's first
integrated circuit at a Dallas laboratory in September,
sparking an electronics revolution that changed the world and created a global market now worth more than $1 trillion a
year.
- November 22, 1963 - President John F. Kennedy was
assassinated in a motorcade traveling
south on Elm Street in Dealey Plaza. This event is memorialized by the
nearby Kennedy Memorial and by the Sixth Floor Museum in the former school book depository at the corner of Elm and Houston.
- 1974 - Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport opens.
- 1976 - Thanks-Giving
Square is completed in downtown Dallas.
- 1979 - Congress passes the
Wright Amendment, restricting passenger air service out of Love Field
Airport.
- 1996 - Dallas Area Rapid Transit begins operating the first light rail system in Texas (and the
Southwest).
- 1997 - Congress passes the Shelby Amendment, which eases some of the Wright Amendment
restrictions on Love Field Airport.
- 2000 - Dallas Area Rapid Transit opens the first subway station in Texas (and the Southwest).
Other Facts about Dallas
- Dallas maintains and operates 41 community and neighborhood recreation centers, 232 playgrounds, 173 basketball courts, 112
volleyball courts, 126 play slabs, 258 neighborhood tennis courts, 258 picnic areas, 69 miles of hiking and biking trails, six
18-hole golf courses, two driving ranges, a 100-acre zoo, 260 acres at Fair Park
and 477 athletic fields.
- The Kalita Humphreys Theater, designed by architect Frank Lloyd
Wright, is the main home of Dallas Theater Center, the nation's oldest regional theater company.
- Dallas holds the highest municipal bond rating among large cities in the United States.
- KERA Channel 13 is the most watched PBS station in the United States and was the first
PBS station to air British comedies.
- Fair Park is home to the largest collection of Art Deco architecture in the world and the tallest ferris
wheel in North America.
- Fair Park also hosts the largest state fair in the country, the State Fair of
Texas.
- Dallas has the highest number of shopping centers per capita in the United States and University Park Mall draws in more
revenue per square foot than any other retail complex in the U.S.
- The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas--a
medical school and research university for graduate level science adjacent to Parkland Hospital--is home to four Nobel Laureates: three in physiology/medicine and one in chemistry
- Dallas has expanded its Convention Center facilities to over 2 million feet. The Center is now capable of accommodating up to
4 major conventions at one time and provides roof-top helicopter landing facilities.
- Dallas offers cultural activities with the world-famous Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, the Dallas Museum of Art, several
IMAX theaters, the African American Museum, the Latino Cultural Center and dozens of cultural activities practically every
day.
- The arts in Dallas adds $500 million to the annual economy and the cultural budget per capita is $7.23.
- While many cities across the country are encountering water shortages, the long-term water supply plan developed by Dallas
water utilities has ensured that the citizens will have sufficient water supply well
through 2050.
- The MasterCard/Visa idea originated in Dallas when three shopping centers, Preston Forest, Preston Royal, and Preston
Center combined to issue PrestoCards to be used at all the shopping centers. Eventually, the concept was purchased and
expanded.
- Dallas also has the largest Cowboy in the World: Big Tex at the State Fair of Texas, a
52-foot-tall cowboy.
- Also at the State Fair is the largest Ferris Wheel in the United States.
- Dallas houses the largest Urban Arts District in the United States.
- Dallas has more shopping centers per capita and the Dallas-Fort
Worth metro has more restaurants per capita than any United States city and metro.
- The Dallas Public Library includes the largest Children's library center in the United States.
- Dallas has the world's largest wholesale trade center: Dallas Market Center.
- The world's first convenience store opened in Dallas in
1927 when the Southland Ice Company began selling eggs and milk from their store at 12th
and Edgewood in the Oak Cliff neighborhood. This company eventually became 7-Eleven
which is still based in Dallas.
- Neiman Marcus started on the corner of Elm and Murphy in downtown
Dallas.
- Art collections such as the $20 million Hamon Building collection; the $38 million Reves collection at the Dallas Museum of
Art; 400 pieces of Egyptian and Nubian art at the DMA; the African-American Museum of Art; the Museum of Africa, Asia, and The
Pacific with rare collections of Indonesian art and textiles; the Museum of Contemporary Art; the Museum of the Americas; the
Museum of Europe; the Meadows Museum of Art featuring fifteenth- through twentieth-century Spanish art.
- Called "...the most beautiful building west of Venice", the Adolphus
Hotel became the first hotel ever to be fully air-conditioned (in 1940).
- The $81.5 million Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center designed by the famous architect I. M. Pei houses the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and the
last hand-made Fisk organ actually to be worked on by Mr. Fisk before he died (Opus 101). The Dallas City Hall was also designed
by I. M. Pei.
- Downtown Dallas has various neighborhoods: the West End Historic District, the Arts District, Deep Ellum, Farmer's Market, the Business district, Dallas Convention Center, Reunion Arena and American Airlines
Center.
Tallest Buildings in Dallas
Movies and TV Filmed in Dallas
- 1945, State Fair
- 1950, Dallas (movie)
- 1967, Bonnie and Clyde
- 1974, Benji
- 1976, Logan's Run
- 1978-1991, Dallas (TV series)
- 1983, Silkwood
- 1983, Tender
Mercies
- 1984, Places in the
Heart
- 1985, The Trip
to Bountiful
- 1987, Paramedics
- 1987, Robocop
- 1988, Dead Solid Perfect (HBO movie)
- 1988, It Takes Two
- 1988, Il Nido del Ragno ("The Spider's Nest")
- 1988, Talk Radio
- 1989, Born on the Fourth of July
- 1989-1991, Gerbert (TV
series)
- 1990, Problem
Child
- 1991, JFK
- 1991, My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys
- 1991, Necessary Roughness
- 1991, Steele's Law
- 1992-2002, Barney & Friends (TV series)
- 1992, Leap of Faith
- 1992, Love Crimes
|
- 1992, Love Field
- 1992, Ruby
- 1993, Hexed
- 1993-2001, Walker, Texas Ranger (TV series)
- 1994, Curse of the Starving Class
- 1995-1998, Wishbone (TV
series)
- 1996, Bottle
Rocket
- 1997, The Apostle
- 1997, Asteroid (TV movie)
- 1997, Batman & Robin
- 1997, Point Blank
- 1999, Any Given
Sunday
- 1999, Boys Don't Cry
- 1999, Office Space
- 1999, Olive, the Other Reindeer (TV special) (animated in Dallas)
- 1999, Universal Soldier, The Return
- 2000, Dr. T &
the Women
- 2001, Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius (animated in Dallas)
- 2001, Pendulum
- 2002-present, The Adventures Of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius (TV series) (animated in
Dallas)
- 2002, The Anarchist Cookbook
- 2002, The Rookie
- 2002, Serving Sara
- 2002, Slap Her... She's French
- 2003, Saving Jessica Lynch (TV movie)
- 2004, The Ant Bully (animated in Dallas)
- 2004, The Benefactor
(TV series)
|
In addition, numerous TV movies and "B-movies" have been filmed in Dallas, as
well as a few lesser known, short-lived TV series.
All photos courtesy of the web site of John Roberts : http://www.miduppertexas.com/dallas/dallas.htm.
External links
Sources
|