Fair Park

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Dallas Fair Park is a 277-acre (1.12 km²) recreational and educational complex located in Dallas, Texas (USA). The complex is registered as a National Historic Landmark and is home to nine museums, six performance facilities, a lagoon, and the largest ferris wheel in North America. Many of the buildings on the complex were constructed for the Texas Centennial Exposition in 1936 which drew over six million visitors. Most of the buildings built for the exposition still survive and Fair Park is recognized as a significant example of art deco architecture.

Texas Centennial Exposition Buildings (1936--1937)
(U.S. National Historic Landmark)
Location: Bounded by Texas and Pacific RR, Pennsylvania, Second, and Parry Aves
Dallas, Texas
Designated as NHL: September 24, 1986
Added to NRHP: September 24, 1986
NRHP Reference#: 86003488

Contents

Main article: State Fair of Texas
The Texas Star, North America's largest ferris wheel at the State Fair of Texas
The Texas Star, North America's largest ferris wheel at the State Fair of Texas

The complex's signature event is the annual State Fair of Texas, the largest state fair in the United States, which has been held at the location since 1886. The fair currently lasts 24 days and begins in the last Friday in September and runs to the third Sunday in October. The movie musical State Fair was filmed in Fair Park in 1961.

Main article: Hall of State
The curved exedra at the entrance of the Hall of State
The curved exedra at the entrance of the Hall of State
The exterior frieze of the Hall of State honors 59 Texas historical figures.  Displayed here are John Reagan, Anson Jones, James Fannin, Gail Borden, William H. Wharton, Peter Bell, Jose Navarro and Elisha M. Pease.
The exterior frieze of the Hall of State honors 59 Texas historical figures. Displayed here are John Reagan, Anson Jones, James Fannin, Gail Borden, William H. Wharton, Peter Bell, Jose Navarro and Elisha M. Pease.

Built in 1936 at the astronomical (especially during the Great Depression) price of US$1.2 million, the building was the most expensive per unit area of any structure built in Texas. It was designed for the centennial of the Republic of Texas by architect George Dahl in the Beaux-Arts style and is considered one of the most representative examples of art deco architecture in Texas. The Hall of State is the culmination of the 1,500-foot (460 m) long Esplanade of State which is flanked by six exhibition pavilions and features a long reflecting pool. It was built using Texas limestone and features many memorials to many of the heroes of Texas history.

Main article: Cotton Bowl (game)
The Cotton Bowl main entrance
The Cotton Bowl main entrance

The Cotton Bowl is played each year at the stadium of the same name in the center of the park. In addition, the "Red River Shootout" game between the University of Texas and the University of Oklahoma and the "Al Lipscomb State Fair Classic" game between Grambling State University (Louisiana) and Prairie View A&M University are held there during the State Fair. This stadium was home to the Dallas Cowboys from 1960 to 1970, when they built a new stadium in Irving. In 2004, the Cowboys announced that they were considering moving back to Fair Park and replacing the Cotton Bowl with a new stadium. Talks with the city of Dallas and Dallas County came to a halt, however, and the Cowboys have now decided to build a new stadium located within the city of Arlington.

Main article: Big Tex
Big Tex
Big Tex

Big Tex is the 49-foot (15 m) tall statue of a cowboy that is often referred to as the face of the State Fair of Texas. He was originally designed as a Santa Claus statue in Kerens, Texas for the 1949 holiday season. The novelty wore off by the following year and State Fair President R.L. Turner purchased the statue for 750 dollars. He then hired Dallas artist Jack Bridges to turn it into a cowboy. He made his debut at the 1952 fair, wearing a 75 gallon hat and size 70 boots which raised his stature to 52 feet (16 m). Big Tex has also been added with a feature that allows him to talk to the visitors of the Fair. His vocabulary was recently updated to curve to the demands of the modern day.

Main article: Smirnoff Music Centre

The Smirnoff Music Centre, an amphitheater that hosts large concerts, is also located on the grounds of Fair Park.

Main article: WRR

Located on the Fair Park grounds is WRR FM, Dallas's city-owned classical music broadcaster, which has the distinction of being the oldest commercially operated radio station in Texas, and second oldest in the United States.

Dallas Grand Prix Circuit
Location Fair Park, Dallas, Texas, USA
Time zone GMT -6
Major events 1984 United States Grand Prix
Circuit Length 3.901 km (2.424 mi)
Turns 21
Lap Record 1:45.353, 133.300 km/h (Niki Lauda, McLaren, 1984)

In July, 1984, Fair Park was converted into a Formula One circuit for a weekend to host the 1984 United States Grand Prix, also referred to as the "Dallas Grand Prix." The event was conceived as a way to demonstrate Dallas' status as a "world-class city" and overcame 100-degree heat, a disintegrating track surface and weekend-long rumors of its cancellation. The interesting tight and twisty course was laid out with help from Chris Pook, organizer of the United States Grand Prix West in Long Beach, California, and featured two hairpin curves. The event was attended by former US President Jimmy Carter and featured Larry Hagman ('J.R.' from the television series, Dallas) waving the green flag to start the race's parade lap. The circuit is no longer operational.

Grand Prix History at Fair Park
Season Date Winning Driver Winning Team Report
1984 July 8 Flag of Finland Keke Rosberg Williams-Honda Report

As of mid 2006, the old neighborhoods just north of Fair Park such as J.D. Herndon's subdivision & the Richard Lagow Estates have begun to be revitalized with new housing. A good example of this can be seen across from the Northern ticket entrance to the State Fair on Fletcher Street where beautiful new duplexes are being built by local homebuilders such as Ace of Spades Construction & Reliable Homes.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

  • Rob Walker (October, 1984). "1st Dallas Grand Prix: Cool Keke". Road & Track, 178-182.
  • Mike S. Lang (1992). Grand Prix!: Race-by-race account of Formula 1 World Championship motor racing. Volume 4: 1981 to 1984. Haynes Publishing Group. ISBN 0-85429-733-2


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