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Looking for houses for sale in Highland Park TX or in the Dallas /
Fort Worth Metroplex, give Hood Realty a call.
Check out our Showcase of homes for sale Highland Park TX,
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Over 47,000 active MLS properties in the Dallas
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Texas Real Estate News 9/3/2010
Multifamily, Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington Grubb & Ellis Acquiring Three North Texas Apartments DALLAS (Dallas Morning News) – Grubb & Ellis Apartment REIT Inc. has contracted to buy three apartment communities valued at $48 million from Virginia-based Mission Residential, according to financial filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. | Multifamily, Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown Chesmar Homes Building in The Woodlands THE WOODLANDS (Houston Business Journal) – Chesmar Homes has acquired six acres on Ashlane Way in the Village of Sterling Ridge in The Woodlands for a new townhome project. | Multifamily, Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington Mid-America Strikes Again . . . And Again DALLAS (Dallas Morning News) – Mid-America Apartment Communities Inc. has purchased The Venue at Stonebridge Ranch, a 250-unit rental property completed in 2000, and La Valencia at Starwood, a new 270-unit apartment community on Lebanon Rd. in Frisco. | Public Facilities, Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown Water Sports Complex Washing into Rosharon ROSHARON (Houston Chronicle) – Cincinnati-based Wake Nation has purchased 20 acres off SH 288 here for a water sports complex. | Infrastructure & Transportation, Texas 100 Most Congested Road Segments in Texas TEXAS (Texas Department of Transportation & Austin Business Journal) – The Texas Department of Transportation has compiled a list of the 100 most congested roadway segments in Texas. | Center News, College Station-Bryan Red Zone Listeners: It's Your Turn to Talk COLLEGE STATION (Real Estate Center) – For nearly a year now, Real Estate Red Zone podcast hosts Bryan Pope and Edie Craig have talked and talked and talked some more without letting you get a word in edgewise. | Center News, College Station-Bryan Going to Galveston? Join Our Focus Group COLLEGE STATION (Real Estate Center) – If you plan on being in Galveston next Friday and Saturday for the Texas Assocation of Realtors convention, you're invited to participate in a Real Estate Center focus group. You might even walk away with a new camcorder. |
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Hood Realty Inc. and our agents are
here to assist you in finding your new home in Highland Park. We believe it’s all
about you, and that is the way it should be. Yes, we really do treat you
like family. So when you, a family member or a friend are looking to move
to the Highland Park area, or perhaps you are relocating within the Highland Park area, give
Hood Realty a call so we can help you with your dream of owning a Highland Park home.
If you need to sell your house before buying your new Highland Park home, give us
a call and we will list your Highland Park house for sale.
Highland Park, on State Highway 289 and State Highway 75 four miles north of downtown Dallas in central Dallas County, is a 2.2-square-mile residential 'island city' surrounded by Dallas on the south, east, and west and University Park on the north. In 1889 the land was bought by a group of Philadelphia investors, the Philadelphia Place Land Association, for an average price of $377 an acre, or $500,000 total. Henry Exall, acting as agent, intended to develop the land along Turtle Creek as Philadelphia Place, an area of exclusive housing modeled after parkland housing in Philadelphia. He laid out gravel roads and built a dam across Turtle Creek to form Exall Lake before the panic of 1893 destroyed the Dallas land boom and ended the development. Exall lost everything except his horse and some of the land. He subsequently began a breeding farm, Lomo Alto Horse Farm. During the 1890s Exall Lake was a favorite picnic destination for Dallasites. Bass and perch abounded in it, and a steamboat operated on it. Exall bred horses with his stallion Electrite until 1906, when John Armstrong bought the land for a residential development.
Armstrong had been a partner of Thomas L. Marsalis in the development of Oak Cliff but sold out to open a meatpacking business. With the sale of his business he invested the money in 1,326 acres of the former Philadelphia Place land to develop under the name Highland Park. Armstrong, along with his sons-in-law Hugh Prather and Edgar Flippen, gave Highland Park its name because of its location on high land overlooking downtown Dallas. The investors hired Wilbur David Cook, a landscape architect of Beverly Hills, California, to design the layout. In addition, George E. Kessler, who designed Fair Park and much of downtown Dallas, was hired to help in planning and development. Twenty percent of the original land was set aside for parks. The first 100-acre addition was begun in 1907 and promoted with the slogan 'Beyond the City's Dust and Smoke.' Later appeared the slogan 'It's Ten Degrees Cooler in Highland Park.' The second development in Highland Park, the Lakeside addition, was developed in 1910.
In 1913 Highland Park asked Dallas for annexation but was refused. The 500 residents therefore voted to incorporate, on November 29, 1913. The incorporation officially took place in 1915, when the population was 1,100; W. A. Fraser was the first mayor. Highland Park set up its own waterworks, which it operated until 1932. In 1915 the third addition to Highland Park was built, and two years later a fourth. After two years a long annexation controversy began. The city of Dallas regretted its earlier refusal to annex Highland Park and began a battle that lasted until 1945, when Dallas was turned down for the last time. The last major land development in Highland Park, Highland Park West, was built in 1924. In 1931 Highland Park Village, the first shopping center of its type in the United States, was constructed in Highland Park.
By 1933 Highland Park had a population of 8,422 and twelve businesses. Its resident population was large, but few businesses and no industry operated in the city. From 1932 to 1950 Highland Park bought water from the city of Dallas, but in 1950 Highland Park and University Park, the 'Park Cities,' began their own waterworks. In 1949 Highland Park had four elementary schools, a junior high, and a high school. Later the Park Cities combined their school districts, as they did their newspapers. The Park Cities News was established in 1938 and the Park Cities People in 1981. In the late 1950s Highland Park had a population high of 12,900, before beginning its slow decline to its 1990 level of 8,739. After its attempt to annex Highland Park was defeated, Dallas annexed the land around it. Highland Park was forced to grow only by building houses on the few remaining vacant lots, or by tearing down old buildings to construct new ones. In the 1989–90 school year the Highland Park Independent School District had four elementary schools, one middle school, and one high school for its 4,066 students. In 1990 Highland Park had strict zoning ordinances. Its reputation for quality housing was enhanced by the abundance of parks running along Turtle Creekqv and by the Dallas Country Club, which is in Highland Park
Houses for sale in Highland Park TX or Houses for lease in Highland Park TX
Looking for a house for sale in Highland Park Texas or looking for a house to lease in Highland Park Texas
Give Hood Realty a call at (972) 596-9112
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