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Cedars, Dallas

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The Dallas Police Headquarters on Lamar.
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The Dallas Police Headquarters on Lamar.

The Cedars is a district in south Dallas Texas (USA). It is adjacent to downtown, east of the Trinity River and west of Fair Park and Expo Park.

The Cedars was originally developed in the 1870s with moderately-priced homes, but by the late 1800s the neighborhood had become one of the premier destinations in Dallas, with stately Victorian homes belonging to wealthy businessmen, lawyers, and politicians dotting the streets. The Cedars was also the home of Dallas' Jewish community, and the neighborhood included the Shaareth Israel synagogue. (Stanley Marcus of Neiman Marcus fame was born in the Cedars.) By the early 1900s, however, light industry and growing population pressures had begun to take the bloom off the neighborhood's rose, and most of the city's wealthiest began to move further north to neighborhoods northeast of downtown. Even as industry, such as the Sears-Roebuck warehouse that now is home of the South Side on Lamar lofts, moved in, fine homes continued to be built, especially for well-to-do members of the Jewish community. But by the 1920s, the massive Victorians of the late 1800s were gone, the synagogue was demolished, and most people moved on. In the 1960s, virtually all of the remaining homes were destroyed by the city for highway projects. Today, only a scant handful of homes (perhaps as few as six) from the neighborhood's original residents survive, none in restored condition, and the area has been taken over by light industry and many low-income residences built in later years.

The area has recently experienced the beginnings of an urban transformation with new townhomes and apartments and developments like the DART's Cedars Station, the loft/retail development South Side on Lamar, the Dallas Police Headquarters, and entertainment venues Gilley's Dallas and Poor David's Pub. However, development has been constrained by a large (albeit mostly harmless) local homeless population and several homeless shelters, which has led to often acrimonious battles between Cedars landowners and developers, homeless advocates, and the Dallas City Council.

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[ v]·[ d]·[ e]
The City of Dallas
Areas Downtown | East Dallas | North Dallas | Oak Cliff | Oak Lawn | South Dallas | West Dallas
Communities Cedars | Deep Ellum | Kessler | Knox Park | Lake Highlands | Lakewood | Old East Dallas | Pleasant Grove | Preston Hollow | Scyene | Stemmons Corridor | Turtle Creek | Uptown
Neighborhoods Arts District | Belmont | Bishop Arts District | Bryan Place | Casa Linda Estates | Cityplace | Expo Park | Fair Park | Farmers Market | Hollywood Heights/Santa Monica | International Center | Junius Heights | Kidd Springs | Kings Highway Conservative District | Koreatown | Lake Cliff | Lake Park Estates | Lakewood Heights | LoMac | Lower Greenville | Main Street | Market Center | M-Streets/Greenland Hills | Munger Place | Peak's Suburban Addition | Preston Center | Reunion | State Thomas | Swiss Avenue | Telecom Corridor (Richardson) | Vickery Meadows | Vickery Place | Victory Park | West End | Wheatley Place | Winnetka Heights | Wynnewood North
Enclaves Addison | Cockrell Hill | Highland Park | University Park
School districts Dallas | Carrollton-Farmers Branch | Duncanville | Garland | Highland Park | Mesquite | Plano | Richardson

 


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