Thursday, October 27, 2011

Hunky's


         321 North Bishop, where Hunky's is now, was originally a fruit stand. Since then, it has been home to other things. For years it was the Balcom Radio Company. In, 1941, they sold screen grid radios for $179. Today that would be over $2,000! Later it became Genie's Bishop Grill until 2005. This greasy spoon restaurant was known for its chicken fried steak, yeast rolls and peanut butter pie.            

Thursday, October 20, 2011

400 Bishop Avenue


                         400 North Bishop, now home to Vera Cruz, was the Goodier Cosmetics Company which produce over 300 different cosmetics like the after-shaves Breezo and Pompadour. Goodier produced cosmetics for Mary Kay and eventually became a part of Mary Kay.
                         Where Decanter is located, was the original home of what eventually became the Oak Cliff Chamber of Commerce, a group started by Martin Weiss. There were many civic meetings in this spot over the years. Lots of events happened here such as miniature garden exhibits, plant swaps, pie sales, and a Robert Browning poetry club. In 1927, aviation cadets learned how to build their own planes here. In '34 there was a meeting there to discuss how to deal with Clyde Barrow, now dubbed, the “super criminal.”   

Monday, October 17, 2011

Big, Roomy, Clean and Happy



If you were to visit the site of The Soda Gallery in 1925, you would find the Clarence Saunders Grocery Store. At the store, advertised as a “big, roomy, clean, happy store,” you could buy a roast for 18 cents a pound and pickled pig's feet for 5 cents.  Later, Winniford Machine Shop took it's place. As an accountant for the IRS, Mr. Winniford needed a hobby, so he turned to model trains, which he claimed changed his life. Soon after, he quit his job and started a machine shop in which he made small parts for planes and worked on small inventions, like a gadget to keep minnows alive.  
                   

Friday, October 14, 2011

410 North Bishop


 In 1919, the Rialto Theater was located in Artisan's Collective Gallery (410 North Bishop). For ten years it showed silent movies, which were a huge draw before television. Then, beginning in 1929, when sound was added to movies, it showed “talkies.” 
.           Later it became the Astor Theater, which bragged about its “air seats” and “scientific acoustical arrangements.” If you go inside Artisan's Collective Gallery, you will see, just inside the door, a photo of the Astor Theater
                   Soon after the new theater opened, the Oak Cliff Little Theater started performing in the building. The Little Theater movement was started to provide young people with a chance to learn about acting. The one that met on Bishop was one of the best Little Theaters in the Southwest and people came from all over North Texas to see them.
Step into the alley beside the building. After passing more murals, also done by high school students, you will see a bricked-in door high above the ground. When the Astor Theater was in business, there were steps leading up to the door and a sign hung above it that read “colored entrance.” African-Americans were not allowed to enter through the same door as the whites, and they had to take the highest seats. Since this was before air conditioning, the highest seats would, no doubt, be the hottest.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Hell's Kitchen


A Westinghouse Refrigerator

 On the corner of Bishop and Seventh, you will find a restaurant by the name of Hattie's. This building was the home of Rick's Furniture for many years. In 1938 they advertised a demonstration called “Hell's Kitchen” to prove the effectiveness of Westinghouse refrigerators. They made a kitchen in the store that was 120 degrees, but the refrigerators still kept the food at a safe 40 degrees.
In '52 there was a huge fire that destroyed the back half where the refrigerators were kept. The fire could be seen from four miles away. 

The Oak Cliff Broom Factory


The Oak Cliff Broom Factory was on the corner of Bishop and Seventh, although we aren't sure which corner it was. It was owned by a blind man, C.H. Chatten. (Brooms have been a common blind-made product for at least 100 years.) He started the company with four blind boys as employees. It eventually grew, until it provided jobs for 100's of blind people. Once Mr. Chatten received a thank-you note from President Franklin Roosevelt in appreciation for the gigantic mop and broom he sent him to “sweep away the corruption” in the government.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Martin Weiss


 In the late 1890s a Hungarian immigrant named Martin Weiss arrived in New York City without family or friends. His poor, widowed mother sent him to America as a young man with $84 sewn into his coat. His first job was helping a blind violinist around New York , but soon he moved to Texas to live with the violinist's sister, whose daughters taught Weiss to read and write. After years of earning and losing money, he finally became wealthy after purchasing a millinery supply company on Elm in downtown Dallas. Weiss also began to build properties in the 1920s, such as this strip along the east side of Bishop.
Weiss became a much-loved philanthropist in Oak Cliff, giving away his money to orphanages and to nearby Methodist Hospital. Each year he gave gold watches to the top students at Oak Cliff High School. He said he did this because he could never repay the United States for giving him such opportunities.
Standing in front of Hattie's and looking up, you can see his name carved into the facade of his building.   

Monday, October 3, 2011

A Celebration


In August of 1916, Bishop Avenue is paved. To celebrate, they hold a dance. Here's what the Dallas Morning News had to say about it:
"Hundreds of couples of all ages danced on the pavement of Bishop Avenue, between 7th and Davis last night, while a crowd of probably 8,000 people hemmed them in, filling the sidewalks and overflowing on adjoining vacant lots and cross streets.
A large orchestra was seated on the sidewalk and dispensed popular dance music. They were flanked on each side by tables from which refreshments were served to all-comers.
Hundreds of women and girls, clad in summery gowns, greeted their friends and whirled through the crowd to the strains of the music.”