The 150 Year Old Cemetery in the Motel Parking Lot (and other gravesites of note)

    It east Fort Worth, on I-30 and Beach Street, sits a 150 year old cemetery on a bluff overlooking downtown. At one time this final resting place had a majestic vista. The cemetery was once part of the Ayers family 320 acre farm. Over the years, the family farm was sold off. Part of the cemetery still remains, unfortunately it is in the parking lot of a Motel 6.  

     Because on the hedges that surround the cemetery, it's very possible that a motel guest may be unaware that the final resting place of a Fort Worth pioneer is feet away from where they laid their heads down the previous night. 

   Directions to the cemetery 


 The cemetery in the parking lot, hidden behind shrubs

One of three gates in the small cemetery 




Inside the cemetery, the grass was high an unkept on the day I visited



A historical marker inside the cemetery

Some of the grave markers inside the small cemetery












Is That Your Front Lawn or a Cemetery?

On of the most unusual gravesites in the metroplex is the Warren Angus Ferris in Dallas' Forest Hills neighborhood. Many people drive by the cemetery everyday without  realizing there are gravesites in the middle of this enclave of homes. At first glance, it looks like a large corner lot, perhaps the front yard for the house right behind the cemetery.

   It actually is the finally resting place of over 100 souls dating back to 1847 on a patch of land set aside on the Ferris family farm in what is now an east Dallas . Over the years, the neighborhood was built on the old farm. By the 1970s vandals had destroyed the remaining tombstones. The Forest Hills Neighborhood Association has taken it up themselves to restore and maintain the cemetery, where it is used by the neighborhood as a place of quiet reflection. 
    

The only tombstone remaining, a replacement marker for a veteran of the War of 1812.



The Cemetery today is used as a place of quiet reflection by the neighborhood.


A historic marker on the site


Across the street from the cemetery at the corner of St Francis and San Leandro sits Sanger Elementary.  




The Cemetery Off Airport Freeway 
Near the Whataburger

   Next time you are on westbound State Highway 183 just past DFW Airport but before the Valley View Drive overpass, look for a cluster of fenced in cedar trees on the right. 

   In the late 1800s, this land was home to the Tompkins family dairy. A small plot of land was set aside for  a family cemetery with Isaac Tompkins being buried there in the 1897. Over 100 year later, the dairy is long gone but the family plot is still there, just feet from the freeway.  The Tompkins family still has plots available for future family members.





The Gravesites of Bonnie and Clyde


The final resting places of the notorious Bonnie and Clyde are both in Dallas. Follow the link for more information on their sites.





The Gravesite of Lee Harvey Oswald




   The noted assassin of President Kennedy was buried in Fort Worth's Rose Hill cemetery after being shot by Jack Ruby in the basement of the Dallas Municipal Building.  Authorities struggled to find a cemetery that would accept the corpse before Rose Hill volunteered. 

   The funeral was so sparsely attended that reporters had to fill in as pall bearers. The only preacher who agreed to hold the service didn't even show up for the funeral. 

  Directions to the gravesite can be found on this Google Maps Link




The Gravesite the was Built to Overlook a KKK Assembly Hall


Above, the Obelisk and final resting place of William McDonald, a prominent African American banker, civic and political leader in Fort Worth for the first part of the 20th Century.  


   Legend has it, that upon his passing, he wanted his monument to be seen from the front steps of Fort Worth's Ku Klux  Klan headquarters. A lasting memory for lifelong advisories.

The former KKK Hall still stands on Fort Worth's Main Street between the Tarrant County Courthouse and the stockyards.  

The obelisk of William MacDonald, built on a hill to beastly seen from the front steps of the Klan Hall 



The Gravesite of Lee Harvey Oswald






Texas Stadium - Home to the Dallas Cowboys . . . and Drive In Movie Theaters?

From 1972 to 1982, Texas Stadium previous home of the Dallas Cowboys was also home to a three screen drive in movie theatre. The screens had the capability to fold over in high winds and on weekends to provide a game day pavilion. 


The Hinged Screen at the Texas Stadium Parking Lot



One of the original screens converted to a pavilion long after the drive in closed






Implosions!




Our latest implosion!


 

Three at once!  Three building at UT Southwestern in Dallas imploded all at once! 




The Uptown Building of Central that didn't quite fall all the way  2-16-2020, leaving the "Leaning Tower of Dallas





A Downtown Dallas office building owned by the First Baptist Church was brought down on Saturday June 29, 2019





    Westchester Plaza, a 12 Story Apartment Complex in Fort Worth come down Sunday Morning,  March 18 at 8 am.  The Apartments were on the corner of 8th Avenue and Pennsylvania in the Medical District across the street from the Thistle Hill Mansion.   The building was constructed in 1951.





            

    Texas Stadium,  home of the Dallas Cowboys for almost 40 years, met it's fate on April 11, 2010. Located in the apex of Highways 114, Northwest Highway and 183, the stadium parking lots were once used on non game days as drive in Movie theaters.







   The Thomas Building in downtown Dallas was used for the Cotton business for over 70 years. It sat vacant for it's last 20 years before coming down in November of 2012.  It's site, 1314 Wood St.  is now used for parking. 





   The First Baptist Church of Dallas imploded 4 buildings of their downtown campus for new construction on October 30, 2010. 





   The Power Plant of Northlake in Coppell comes down in 2012. 





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