Arlington Heights, Fort Worth, Texas

Postcard of a pavilion and Lake Como in Arlington Heights, 1907

Arlington Heights is a neighborhood in Fort Worth, Texas.

A Denver, Colorado-originating promoter named H. B. Chamberlain bought 2,000 acres (810 ha) of land from a Chicago financier named Tom Hurley and Robert McCart. He attempted to develop Arlington Heights, but a hotel he built, Ye Arlington Inn, burned in 1894 and he died in a bicycle accident in London. Arlington Heights was developed after the United States moved military personnel in the surrounding area in World War I.[1]

Joyce E. Williams, a sociologist who wrote Black Community Control: A Study of Transition in a Texas Ghetto, wrote that almost all of the Lake Como women worked in Arlington Heights. Those women referred to it as "Little California", a reference to a fantasy idea of the state of California.[2]

Education

Arlington Heights High School

The Fort Worth Independent School District serves Arlington Heights. North Hi-Mount Elementary School serves Arlington Heights.[2] Arlington Heights High School is in the community.

References

  • George, Juliet. Fort Worth's Arlington Heights (Images of America). Arcadia Publishing, 2010. ISBN 0738578932, 9780738578934.

Notes

  1. ^ Ladd, Sweetie. Sweetie Ladd's Historic Fort Worth. Texas Christian University Press, 1999. ISBN 0875651968, 9780875651965. p. 30.
  2. ^ a b George, p. 7.

External links

  • Arlington Heights Neighborhood Association website

32°44′11″N 97°22′58″W / 32.73639°N 97.38278°W / 32.73639; -97.38278


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