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Timeline of History in the Evans & Rosedale Business and Cultural District |
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Through Time on Evans Avenue! |
1930 |
1945 |
1960 | |||
Jazz Music: the area served as a center of jazz music in the first half of the last century! | ||||||
"Professor [I. M.] Terrell" ( - 1931). I. M. Terrell became Principal of the first 'colored' school East of downtown in 1882 (to the north; see link to map). Terrell ultimately became president of Prairie View A&M University. (Read more at http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/TT/fte56.html!) | ||||||
Lucille Bishop Smith (1892-1985). Lucille Bishop Smith came to the neighborhood in 1912, began a 70-year cooking career, and set up her bakery and catering shop at 333 Evans Avenue. She also taught cooking and wrote cookbooks. Smith is considered Texas' first Afro-American businesswoman. Her famous chili biscuits have been served on American Airlines flights, and at the White House. | ||||||
(Map shows the Evans & Rosedale Business and Cultural District.) | William "Gooseneck Bill" McDonald (1912-1950). The son of a former slave, McDonald is considered Texas' first Afro-American millionaire. He founded The Fraternal Bank and Trust Company, Texas' largest African-American-owned bank. (See http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/MM/fmc45.html for more!) |