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Dallas Texas
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Dallas, Texas. Located on the Trinity River, Dallas is the seat of Dallas County and also lies partly in Collin, Denton, and Kaufman counties. The third largest city in Texas (after Houston and San Antonio) and the ninth largest city in the United States in 1998, Dallas is the center of the largest consolidated metropolitan area in the state. Historically, Dallas has been the transportation and marketing center for the north Texas area. It has evolved into a major center of finance, commerce, trade, and manufacturing for the southwestern United States and Mexico. The terrain is mostly flat and drains into the Trinity River. The climate is continental, with hot summers and moderately cold winters. The city was probably named for George Mifflin Dallas, vice president of the United States (1845-1849), although the exact origin of the name is undetermined and historians have also suggested his brother, Commodore Alexander J. Dallas of the United States Navy, and Joseph Dallas, who settled in the area in 1842, as possible namesakes for the city. George Mifflin Dallas 11th Vice-President of the United States (March 4, 1845 to March 3, 1849) Born: July 10, 1792, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Died: Dec. 31, 1864 Member of the U.S. Senate (1831-33) Minister to Russia (1837-39) Minister to Great Britain (1856-61) He was the son of Alexander J. Dallas (1759-1817), who had been secretary of the treasury (1814-16). A Democrat, Dallas held various local offices in Pennsylvania As vice-president he presided over the Senate debates on the Mexican War and the Wilmot Proviso. He secured an agreement clarifying Britain's role in Central America and a disavowal of Britain's traditional claim to the right of searching at sea the ships of other nations. |
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The city of Dallas extends over a land area of 885.5 sq km (341.9 sq mi). The Dallas metropolitan area is made up of the counties of Collin, Dallas, Denton, Ellis, Henderson, Hunt, Kaufman, and Rockwall. In addition to Dallas, cities with more than 100,000 in population in the area are Garland, Irving, Mesquite, and Plano. Dallas is also part of the Dallas/Fort Worth Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Area, also known as the Metroplex. In addition to Dallas and Fort Worth, the Metroplex includes Arlington and more than 80 other towns and communities. The city of Dallas has sprawled into nearby counties, growing primarily to the north and west. The downtown is known for its distinctive contemporary architecture. Near the commercial center of the city is the West End Historic District, a group of 19th-century warehouses converted into shops and restaurants. Also nearby is the Deep Ellum (Elm) area, which was a thriving center of businesses owned by black Americans from the time of the Civil War (1861-1865) until the 1930s. This neighborhood now contains clubs, restaurants, and galleries. |
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The city's historic sites include
Fair Park, the largest art deco art and architecture district in the world and a National Historic Landmark, located east of downtown; and
Dealey Plaza, the site of the assassination in 1963 of President John F. Kennedy and a National Historic Landmark District, located downtown. Other sites are the
John F. Kennedy Memorial, designed by American architect Philip C. Johnson; the former county courthouse, designed in the Romanesque architectural style; the present courthouse and downtown library, designed by Chinese American architect I. M. Pei; the Sixth Floor of the former Texas School Book Depository, from which Lee Harvey Oswald allegedly shot Kennedy; and
Old City Park, the site of Dallas's oldest public park and now a museum of the architectural and cultural history of the city and region. |
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Dallas's population increased from 974,078 in 1980 to 1,006,877 in 1990; by 1996 it had reached 1,053,292. According to the 1990 census, whites constitute 55.4 percent of the population of Dallas; blacks, 29.5 percent; Asians and Pacific Islanders, 2.1 percent; and Native Americans, 0.5 percent. Hispanics, who may be of any race, represent 20.3 percent. The dominant demographic factor in Dallas, as in the state as a whole, has been the rapid growth of the Hispanic population. The Dallas metropolitan area grew from 2,055,000 in 1980 to 2,676,000 in 1990, with the number of Hispanics nearly doubling to 14.0 percent of the 1990 population. Whites, at 73.3 percent, and blacks, at 15.8 percent, are the two largest racial groups in the metropolitan region. |
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Dallas contains more than 400 parks that cover a total of about 20,000 hectares (about 50,000 acres). Notable parks include Marsalis Park, which contains the
Dallas Zoo, and the parks surrounding
White Rock Lake,
Bachman Lake, and
Lake Cliff. City-owned greenbelts parallel White Rock Creek, Turtle Creek, and the Trinity River. Fair Park contains a number of museums, the city aquarium, and the
Cotton Bowl stadium (the site of the annual Cotton Bowl college football game), as well as the fairgrounds and exposition halls that are the site of the annual
State Fair of Texas. The
Dallas Cowboys professional football team plays at Texas Stadium in Irving; the
Dallas Mavericks professional basketball team and the
Dallas Stars professional hockey team play at Reunion Arena; and the
Texas Rangers major league baseball team plays at the nearby Ballpark in Arlington. |
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Dallas grew steadily for the next 30 years. The successful lobbying for two
railroads, the Houston and Texas Central in 1872 and the Texas and Pacific in 1873, initiated this growth. As a rail crossroads, Dallas became a regional transport center for products headed to Northern and Eastern manufacturing centers. Cotton became the principal source of income, but the city also attracted merchants and banking and insurance companies eager to exploit available transportation and communication facilities. Throughout this period, business and political leaders forged close ties, thus shaping the character of the city and guiding its economic direction. By 1890 Dallas had 38,067 residents and was the largest city in the state. |

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Dallas won a reputation as a politically ultraconservative city in the 1950s. The assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dealey Plaza was a shock to the residents of Dallas and moderated somewhat the city's politics. Nevertheless segregation continued in the city, and the flight of white residents from the inner city intensified racial animosities.
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