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Dateline: February 9,
2006
Ft.
Worth exhibit shows 19th century Clarendon
FORT WORTH – From
the close of the Civil War until shortly after the turn of the 20th
century, a number of artists traveled throughout the United States to
create maplike scenes of each state’s burgeoning settlements, towns, and
cities – including Clarendon, Texas.
These highly detailed
and oversized lithographic prints, created by the artists as if seen from
high above, came to be known as “bird’s-eye views.” Today, the ones
that have survived over the years are remarkable objects for all of the
information they contain, and the Texas views offer a fascinating
chronicle of one of the greatest periods of urban growth in the state’s
history.
From February 18 to
May 28, 2006, the Amon Carter Museum presents “Patterns of Progress:
Bird’s-Eye Views of Texas,” an exhibition of more than 60 views of
cities ranging from Austin, Childress, Denison and El Paso to Sherman,
Texarkana, Victoria, and Wichita Falls. In many cases the prints are at
least three feet wide, and their detail is surprisingly accurate.
The maps will be
displayed in alphabetical order so that visitors can easily find the view
of a particular city. The cities of Austin, Dallas, Denison, Fort Worth,
Gainesville, Galveston, Greenville, Houston, New Braunfels, San Antonio
and Waco each have as many as three or four views published on different
dates.
The image of
Clarendon comes just three years after the town moved from its original
location along the Salt Fork of the Red River to its new site along the
Ft. Worth & Denver rail line.
Thaddeus M. Fowler, a
native of Pennsylvania who drew the Clarendon map, made 16 views in Texas
and more than 400 nationally, making him the most prolific of the
city-view artists.
Looking from the
north, slight changes in elevation as the land rises to the south and west
are apparent on the map, and well-defined gullies twist and turn through
town. The Donley County Courthouse dominates the area, with the Methodist
Episcopal Church, the M. E. Church, South, and the public school all
nearby.
The courthouse, with
its turrets and a corner tower, might not have been complete when Fowler
was here, but it would have been far enough along that he would have had a
good idea of its appearance. Architects even examined Fowler’s work
prior to the restoration of the courthouse in 2003.
The bank building on
Kearney Street seems to dominate downtown, just as the FW&DC
roundhouse does on the east side of town. Both landmarks have long since
disappeared.
The cluster of small
homes along Front Street near the roundhouse probably housed railroad
workers, and the large two-story frame structure at the corner of Kearney
Street directly across from the railroad depot was probably the Windsor
Hotel, which burned to the ground in 1892.
The Museum is open
Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., on
Thursday from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., and on Sunday from noon to 5 p.m.
Exhibition admission
is free for museum members, $6 for adults and $4 for seniors and college
students. Youths age 18 and under get in free.
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