Fort Worth was initially established in 1849 as an army outpost on a bluff overlooking the Trinity River. It has historically been a center of the Texas Longhorn cattle trade. Fort Worth experienced shortages of money, food, and supplies during the Civil War. During the Reconstruction, the population dropped as low as 175 but began to recover. Jacob Samuels, William Jesse Boaz, and William Henry Davis had opened general stores by 1872. In 1884, Khleber M. Van Zandt founded Tidball, Van Zandt, and Company, which became Fort Worth National Bank. After the Texas and Pacific Railway arrived in 1876, Fort Worth became a cattle-shipping boomtown (often called Cowtown), a stopover for longhorn cattle drives on the Chisholm Trail in the early 1870s.
Immigrants from the devastated, war-torn South continued to swell the population, and smaller, community-owned factories and mills gave way to larger ones. Fort Worth became the westernmost railhead and a transit point for cattle shipment via the growing transportation network, soon becoming the “Queen City of the Prairies.” Louisville Niles owned the Fort Worth Stockyards Company and is credited with bringing the two largest meatpacking firms, Armour and Swift, to the stockyards. Mayor Broiles and County Attorney R. L. Carlock launched a reform campaign in the late 1880s.
Fort Worth launched the first prohibition campaign in Texas in 1889, which allowed other businesses and residential development in the area. There was also an influx of Black residents. The black population settled in the city’s southern portion due to state segregation, excluding them from the business district and more expensive residential areas. The Acre’s popularity and profitability declined, and more bums and homeless people were seen on the streets.
Below are some stunning historical photos that will take you back to the late-19th century in Fort Worth.
#1 Panoramic view of downtown Fort Worth, Texas looking west, 1890
#2 L. M. Whitsitt Drug Store, Houston Street and 7th Street, Fort Worth, Texas, 1898
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5 Comments
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Anyone know if the building still standing? Or the address?
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Is the building still standing and if so what is the address? It looks like an old drugstore that was on Camp Bowie “Moseley’s Drugstore” was painted in green on the west side of the building. I think it was close to a store called “The Toy Chest”.
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Building is no longer standing
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Who do I contact for a photograph I have of FT Worth circa 1930 – 1940 that I need authenticated?
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A nice collection here of Fort Worth! Can someone direct me to where I can have a few photographs authenticated? My speculation is downtown Forth Worth circa 1930 – 1940 and preserved well. Family were prominent individuals in the community and these look like an ad you would see in a magazine! One option I thought of is Tarrant County Arlington Library as they have ongoing collections for artifacts. Very grateful I found this site!
#3 Going to a Juneteenth, 1880
#4 Old Fort Worth City Hall, 1893
#5 Businesses on Houston Street, Fort Worth, Texas, 1876
#6 Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association, 1885
#7 Tarrant County courthouse construction, 1894
#8 County courthouse construction, 1894
#9 Tarrant County courthouse, Fort Worth, Texas, 1896
#10 Tarrant County courthouse, Fort Worth, Texas, 1896
#11 Electric street car next to horse drawn buggy in downtown Fort Worth, Texas, 1896
#12 Tarrant County courthouse on Market Day in Fort Worth, 1875
#13 Earliest Fort Worth, Texas skyline, 1884
#14 First Stockyards Hotel and Exchange, 1891
#15 Colonel Richard M. Wynne residence, 1895
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2 Comments
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Where was the Wynne residence located . . . What street?
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Col. Richard M. Wynne residence, 1000 Weatherford St., Fort Worth
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#16 Panoramic view of downtown Fort Worth, Texas, 1890
#17 Saint Joseph’s Infirmary, 1898
#18 Clock tower of the Tarrant County courthouse, 1896
#19 Tarrant County courthouse construction, Fort Worth, Texas, 1894
#20 Aerial view of downtown Fort Worth, 1890
#21 Texas Spring Palace, 1889
#22 Fort Worth National Bank with horses and buggies in front, 1880
#23 Gallup Grocery Store, South Main Street and Hattie Street, Fort Worth, Texas, 1885
#24 Land Agency, 1880
#25 Tarrant County courthouse, 1896
#26 Commerce Club (now Fort Worth Club) and other buildings, 1890
#27 Tarrant County courthouse construction, 1894
#28 Texas Spring Palace, 1889
#29 Downtown Fort Worth, Texas at Houston Street and 8th Street, looking north, 1885
#30 Ellis Hotel, 3rd Street and Throckmorton Street, Fort Worth, Texas, 1888
#31 Texas Spring Palace, 1889
#32 Downtown Fort Worth, 1885.
#33 Interior of Unidentifed Restaurant, 1883
Numerous people pose for a photograph during a holiday dinner in a local restaurant and store. Various prepared dishes sit on the counter, and employees stand in front of shelves lined with grocery items. A small Christmas tree sits on top of a cabinet in the back of the store. Signs for James G. Blain, a Republican candidate for the 1884 presidency, hang above the cash register.
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#34 Texas Spring Palace, Galveston Harbor Exhibit, 1889
#35 Texas Spring Palace, Horse and Plow Karporama, 1889
#36 Mule Cart and Cotton Yard, 1885
#37 Volunteer Fire Department, 1880
#38 Fort Worth Benevolent Home for Orphans, 1885
#39 Clara Burnham’s Elementary School Class, 1883
#40 South Side Grocery, 1888
#41 First Christian Church
First Christian Church was established in 1855 and is Fort Worth's oldest continuously operating church. This building, constructed in 1878, was its second location. This photograph shows the front of the building with what appears to be the entire congregation of men, women, and children.
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#42 Old Post Office Building, 1896
#43 Group at Park, 1895
#44 Women with Horse, 1895
#45 Main Street, 1896
#46 Group in Front of House, 1895
#47 Interior of E.T. Bergin Home
#48 Fort Worth Granite and Marble Works, 1898
An exterior view of the Fort Worth Marble and Granite Works building, located at 1013-1015 Throckmorton Street. Pieces of marble and granite sit on the sidewalk underneath the awning. Five employees, some wearing aprons, pose for the photograph. Two children are visible in an upstairs window. An advertisement for the Lemen Brothers circus is in the background to the right. This building was expanded around 1903.
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#49 Cotton Sale in Downtown Fort Worth, 1878
A cotton sale in the public square in downtown Fort Worth. Men sit on wagons and large bales of cotton. The City National Bank Building, with Daggett & Hatcher Grocers, is in the back of the square. D.C. Bennett Dry Goods, H.T. Havens Hardware Store, and the Alamo Sample Room are on the right.
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#50 Homes of Dr. E.J. Beall and Captain J.C. Terrell, 1875
#51 E.T. Bergin Residence, 1889
#52 Women on Lawn, 1895
#53 Troops in Parade, 1899
#54 Hendricks Building Cigar and News Stand, 1894
#55 Tarrant County courthouse, 1896
#56 Southside Grocery, Fort Worth, Texas, 1880
#57 Construction of Tarrant County Courthouse, 1891
Men, including several county commissioners, pose on the steps of the Tarrant County Courthouse during its construction. The photograph is accompanied by a diagram identifying nine of the men, including Henry M. Furman, Ben Waggoman, Henry R. Wall, H.C. Holloway, L.D. Nichols, M.E. Collins, B.B. Paddock, J.L. Mock, and R.G. Johnson."
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#58 Construction of Tarrant County Courthouse, 1895
#59 Tarrant County Courthouse, 1895
#60 Construction of the Tarrant County Courthouse, 1892
#61 Hoof and Horn Buffet and Delicatessen, 1890
#62 City Hall, 1893
The city hall building, located on the corner of Throckmorton and Tenth Streets. The cornerstone for the limestone building was laid in 1892, and the cost of construction was $125,000. Several horse and wagons are parked in front of the building and two men converse on the sidewalk. The building was demolished in 1938 to make room for the new city hall.
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#63 Fort Worth Water Works Plant, 1896
#64 Texas Spring Palace, May 1890
The Texas Spring Palace's Cherokee County Tower and Rusk County facade. Each Texas county was invited to contribute agricultural materials to decorate the building's facade. Both the Cherokee County Tower and Rusk County Tower exteriors were composed of corn, Spanish moss, cane, corn shucks, popcorn, sorghum, and millet.
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#65 City Hall, 1893
#66 Tarrant County Courthouse, 1895
#67 Three Gentlemen in a Park, 1893
#68 Texas & Pacific Railway Station, 1890
#69 L. M. Whitsitt Drug Store, 1890
#70 Fire Men and Fire Wagon, 1893
#71 Fire Hall and City Hall, 1899
#72 Unidentified City Street, 1899
#73 A view of an unidentified dirt street. A man is doing yard work on the left, 1889
#74 Bell-Eddleman-McFarland House, 1899
This Victorian house, located at 1110 Penn Street, was built in 1899 by the firm Messer, Sanguinet, & Messer. It was built for Sarah Ball, and purchased by William Eddleman, the founder of Western National Bank; it was the residence of Carrie McFarland, Eddleman's daughter, until she died in 1978.
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#75 Literary Society of Fort Worth University ,1891
#76 Colorado State Capitol, 1894
#77 Interior of Unidentified Lobby, 1899
#78 Villager at Community Well, 1899
#79 Ella Hogsett’s Japanese Reception, 1899
A gathering of women, wearing costumes, pose under an umbrella. Attendees include Donnie Lu Carter, Mary Muller, Anine Samuels, Florence Adams, Grace Potter, Frances Tarlton, Ann Fields, Jennie Walker Davis, Ora Stroud Slack, Abbie Johnston, Grace Hollingsworth, Susie Bell Blanchard, Mary Bell Bradley, Lola Binyon, Daisie Beverly, Alberta Triplett, Frannie Montgomery, Louise Orrick [Bin], Anna Hogsett Ballard, and Ella Hogsett.
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#80 Botany Class, Fort Worth University
#81 Winfield Scott Residence, 1899
#82 Old Federal Building, 1899
#83 R.J. Lamb House, 1899
#84 City Hall and Fire Hall, 1899
#85 Tarrant County Courthouse, 1899
#86 Central Fire Station, 1899
#87 First Presbyterian Church, 1899
#88 Old City Hall Building, 1899
#89 St. Ignatius Academy, 1899
#90 Hotel Worth, 1899
#91 First Christian Church
#92 J.T. Ellis and Jerry Ellis, 1890
#93 A Horse Drawn Surrey at the Fort Worth Fencibles, 1895
#94 Fort Worth Benevolent Home for Orphans, 1885
#95 Children Outside of a School House, 1885
A group of children pose for a photograph outside of a schoolhouse, possibly at the Fort Worth Benevolent Home for orphans. The girls, each holding a doll, stand in two rows; the boys sit against the wall of the school. A male teacher stands in a doorway, and a few older girls sit in the window sills.
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#96 Fort Worth Parade, 1895
#97 John Cella, Fort Worth Fire Chief, 1898
Written on accompanying insert: "This is a picture of the first paid Fire Chief of Fort Worth, John Cella, who was chief from 1894 to 1901, when he was succeeded by Jas H. Maddox . . . By the way of explanation, Chief Cella is in the Chief's buggy and it is decorated with white paper flowers to appear in the annual flower parade. In addition to being Chief, John Cella operated a bar in the old Mansion Hotel, on the corner of 4th & Main streets, and he paid the fireman by check and had them come to the bar to have their checks cashed, buy a drink, and pay the Chief any money they owed him.
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#98 Mulkey Boys after a Flower Parade, 1898
#99 Flower Carnival Carriage, 1898
#100 Fort Worth University, 1891
#101 Fort Worth University Medical Department, 1895
#102 Fort Worth Parade on Belknap Street, 1898
A parade headed east down the 100 block of Belknap Street, past the Tarrant County Jail (on the right). John A. Mugg, Jr. is seated on the left in the 1st buggy; his son M.E. Mugg is the small boy in the wagon. John A. Mugg, Jr. was grandson of A. F Leonard and Mary Ann Foster Leonard.
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#103 West Side Fort Worth, 1896
#104 Jennings Addition House, 1890
#105 Thomas Jennings Home, 1894
#106 Hyde Jennings Home, 1890
#107 Casa Ventosa, 1898
#108 Frank W. Ball Home, 1895
#109 Interior of Frank W. Ball Home, 1895
#110 Old Home of Helen Daggett Moorman, 1890
#111 Masonic Widows’ and Orphans’ Home, 1899
#112 Home of David Boaz, 1892
#113 Ephraim M. Daggett Home,1890-06-01
#114 Ephraim M. Daggett Home, located at 603 E. Bluff Street, 1890
#115 Texas Spring Palace, 1890
#116 David Boaz Residence, 1894
#117 Fort Worth High School, 1895
Numerous people stand on walkways and sit on the grounds of Fort Worth High School, a Romanesque-style building built in 1891. Designed by Sanguinet and Haggart, it was constructed by contractors Smith and Barden. This was the first school in the area to educate both boys and girls, but was destroyed by fire on December 2, 1910.
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#118 Fort Worth Saddle Shop, 1890
#119 John W. Bondurant’s Office, 1894
#120 Fort Worth & Rio Grande Railway, 1890
#121 South Side Grocery, 1888
#122 Land agency on the corner of Lancaster and Main Street, 1880
#123 Louis Bicocchi Grocery, 1893
#124 Cotton Belt Railroad Depot, 1896
#125 Hendricks Office Building, 1890
An architectural rendering of Hendricks office building by architects Haggart & Sanguinet. The structure was to be built at the corner of Seventh and Main Streets, but may have instead become the Worth Hotel, which had the August's Department Store occupying the ground floor.
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#126 Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association, 1885
#127 Worth Hotel and August’s Department Store, 1899
#128 Farmers and Mechanics National Bank Building, 1895
#129 Cattle Yard and Train Stop, 1890
#130 Chile’s Dam, 1896
Chile's Dam, also known as City Park Dam, seen from the banks of the Clear Fork of the Trinity River. When this photo was taken, the City of Fort Worth Water Works Department had just completed repairs on a series of dams located on the Clear Fork. The department designated Chile's Dam as Clear Fork Dam, No. 1, which was built in 1892 to provide a water supply for the Holly Water Treatment Plant. The dam was demolished when the river channel was straightened in the 1930s. The Lancaster Avenue Bridge crosses over the old site.
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#131 View from Below a Bridge, 1899
#132 Troops in Review, 1899
#133 Family Dwelling, 1899
#134 Philippine Volcano, 1899
#135 Troops Swim in a River, 1899
#136 Spanish Artillery, 1899
#137 Army Horses Feeding, 1899
#138 Philippine Cemetery, 1899
#139 Philippine Church, 1899
This is likely a photograph of the Basilica of the Immaculate Conception (on left) in Batangas City. The building to the right probably served as a headquarters for the Battalion of Engineers that was attached to the 8th Army. A closer view reveals supply wagons, and numerous American troops walking in the plaza.