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Welcome to Arlington, a community that today
ranks among the 50 most populous cities in the country, but
which began life as a struggling and besieged frontier fort
established when Texas was still a republic. Fifteen U.S.
cities, towns and villages across the nation bear the name
"Arlington," the largest of which in both area and population—
as befits the bigger-in-Texas mode — resides in the Lone Star
state.
With a population of more than
365,000 and spread across 100 square miles, Arlington is
located precisely midway between Dallas and Fort Worth. In
both population and area it has a unique distinction other
than its 49-in-population standing. It is the largest "mid"
city in America.
Arlington’s history is complex, its identity evolving over
more than 150 years. It has been a frontier outpost, an
agricultural center, a site of Indian battles and a mecca for
horse racing and gambling. It once was famed for its mineral
waters, has long been a college town (it has three colleges),
and it hosts major industrial entities such as the Arlington
General Motors Assembly Plant. Today it is famed for Major
League Baseball and amusement attractions that feature giant
roller coasters, but it also has a high tech component that
includes nanotechnology research, computer chip manufacturing
and a technology incubator designed to introduce leading edge
university research into the world of commerce.
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The "Tour of Historic Arlington"
brochure is available at City Hall, Convention & Visitors Bureau and George W. Hawkes Central
Library. |
This web site, however, is designed to provide a window
into Arlington’s past. Two driving tours are mapped that
locate sites and buildings from the days when trolleys ran
down the middle of Abram St. (the Interurban line) and
commerce centered around the old mineral well at the corner of
Main and Center streets. In those days, there was a train
depot downtown (also the site of a famed Old-West style
shootout). It was there that Arlington came into being with
the arrival of the first train in 1876.
Named in honor of Robert E. Lee’s hometown in Virginia,
Arlington rests squarely on the divide of two distinct
geological strata, a vast "grand prairie" called the Eagle
Ford, and an oaks-dominated woodland of gently rolling hills
called the Eastern Cross Timbers. Its heritage is a colorful
one, beginning with Native Americans and continuing through
the explorations of the first Europeans and the earliest days
of the Texas Republic. No less than six national flags have
flown here.
The first non-Indian settlement here dates to the 1840s.
Indeed, Arlington began as the failed Bird’s Fort, evolving
into the site of a Texas Ranger post (Johnson Station)
authorized by Republic President Sam Houston to serve as a
dividing line between settlers and a collection of Indian
tribes driven to the area by American westward expansion.
The Republic of Texas signed its
first ever Indian peace treaty here in 1843 at Bird’s Fort
with nine tribes including Cherokee, Delaware, Biloxi, Caddo,
Keechie and Waco representatives. Caddo tribes dominated early
Indian settlements and they were the first residents of the
area, camping in such an abundance of settlements that one
local waterway, Village Creek, was named for their presence.
Early Caddos practiced agriculture near the waterway, their
long-time presence established by numerous archaeological
digs. Caddo settlements were visited by the first European
explorers to the area, including Cabeza de Vaca in 1535 and La
Salle in 1687, and by Texas Rangers, who defeated them in the
Battle of Village Creek in 1841. These lands became part of
the vast plantation holdings of Col. Middleton Tate Johnson,
who arrived in 1846 from the Mexican War and took command of a
Texas Rangers company at what became known as Johnson Station.
The Pioneer Trail highlights sites of early settlements,
including those of the Indians. It starts at Johnson
Plantation Cemetery and ends at Watson Community, the two
settlements that relocated to form the new community of
Arlington when the Texas and Pacific Railroad located nearby.
The Tour of Historic Buildings picks up where the Pioneer
Trail leaves off with buildings from the beginning of
modern-day Arlington. It starts at Six Flags Over Texas and
Rangers Ballpark in Arlington, where the new and the old Texas Rangers come
together, and ends at Meadowbrook Park. The two driving tours
have been designed so that you can proceed directly from the
Pioneer Trail to the Tour of Historic Buildings. Be patient…
like Texas, Arlington is big and takes awhile to explore.
Information provided by the Arlington Landmark Preservation
Commission.
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