History
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Ball-Eddleman-McFarland House 1110 Penn Street Fort Worth, Texas
Fort Worth’s “Victorian Lady,” is one of the best-preserved examples of Victorian architecture left in Texas. Little has changed in this home since 1899, when it was one of many mansions lining the streets of Fort Worth’s fashionable Quality Hill.
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Downtown Architecture
From ZigZag Moderne to Post-Modern Glass Skyscrapers, Fort Worth has a rich architectural history.
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Located in Sundance Square
Fire Station Number 1 2nd and Commerce Streets
"150 Years of Fort Worth" traces Fort Worth's development, from its beginning as a frontier outpost, through its rowdy youth as a cattle town, to present day.
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Fort Worth Central Library 500 W. 3rd Street Fort Worth, Texas
Fort Worth's first library began in April 1892 as an idea by 20 women, meeting at the home of Jenny Scheuber, to form the Fort Worth Public Library Association. Find out how their success lead to today's magnificent Central Library.
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Hells Half Acre South Downtown
The TRUE story of the Wild West...Fort Worth style!
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Located in Sundance Square
Heritage Trails
Bronze markers placed throughout downtown which tell the pivotal stories of Fort Worth's history.
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Historic YWCA Fort Worth & Tarrant County 512 W. 4th Street Fort Worth, Texas
This historic building reflects both the architectural and social character of Fort Worth in the 1920's, and is the ideal place to experience the charm and elegance of an earlier time.
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Interurban Cars #25 and #411
Tour these antique urban trolley cars, originally built in the early 1900's and restored by The T.
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Pioneers Rest Cemetery 620 Samuels Avenue Fort Worth, Texas
Fort Worth's famous burial ground
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Quanah Parker
The last chief of the Comanche Nation, Quanah Parker was a statesman, warrior, and frequent visitor to Fort Worth.
