|
HISTORY
The University Place neighborhood consisted originally of approximately 87 acres of land just northeast of the Texas Christian University campus and three miles southwest of the Fort Worth Central Business District. It is bordered on the north by Park Hill Dr., on the east by Merida St., on the south by the T.C.U. campus and on the west by University Drive.
Originally part of the 1875 M.J. Arocha Survey, this land was divided and passed down through the families of Hendricks, Smith, Burnett and Portwood. In 1883 the land passed to John S. Ball and J. Oscar Clark. They tried to sell the land in 1889, but had to foreclose on the property when the buyers failed to pay the $3,375 note at 10 percent interest. The property was sold on the Tarrant County Courthouse steps in 1903, to John Ball Jr. of New York, and the children of J. Oscar Clark.
After John Ball Jr.'s death, his and Clark's children sold the land to the Fairmount Land Company for $11,000 in 1909. B. L. Waggoman, the president of the Fairmount Land Company began subdividing the land in 1912.
The University Place area was made more attractive to developers after the City of Fort Worth acquired Forest Park in 1909, Texas Christian University moved to its present location in 1910, and a street car line was routed from the Central Business District to the TCU area. In 1922 the land owned by the Fairmount Land Company, University Place, was annexed by the City of Fort Worth.
In the September 16, 1923 edition of the Fort Worth Record, it was written that the Carb Building Company was planning to build brick-veneer cottages in the new addition. In the article it stated that activity in University Place, "is expected to pick up and take a new lease on life."
The Carb Building Company planned to begin building in the addition and assumed the selling rights of the 154 lots in the section. The West Texas Construction Company began the developing of the neighborhood with the installation of curbs and sidewalks and the paving of Greene Avenue.
Most of the homes in University Place were built between 1924 and 1929, helped by the oil boom which occurred after World War I. A system of overpasses and underpasses built in 1929 across the railroad tracks, helped facilitate traffic between University Place and the Central Business District.
Land use restrictions of University Place were recorded on October 17, 1923, and included the then common restriction of prohibiting the sale of 'intoxicating liquors' from any home. The lots were reserved for homes that were constructed of brick, stone, tile or stucco, and cost at least $4,500. Necessary outhouses, garages and servants' houses did not need to be built of brick. |