About This Blog

This blog features: neighborhood restaurants, nearby restaurants, downtown restaurants, Casa View Shopping Center, nearby shopping, Downtown shops.

I will first list places and my connections with them. For the spirit of completeness, I will then list other places, known to me but not visited. I choose not to list the unknown.

I like the section entitled Places I Wish I Had Visited.

My focus is places and locations which existed from 1953, when I moved to Dallas, until 1965, when I graduated from high school. This list will continue with my college years, until I turned 21. I left Dallas in 1969 and, as I did not return except to visit my parents until 1973, my memory of East Dallas ends at that time.

Some categories were easy to separate – restaurants and shopping. Some experiences are not so easy to categorize, but are still meaningful. They may be all lumped in together, and then teased out as other connections are made.

Music wise, we may have thought we were born of the “wrong generation.” I always thought the older generation (i.e. 3 to 4 years older than me) had a richer and deeper experience.

But we, the beginning of the Baby Boomer generation, had it best – stable family life, rising expectations for the middle class and parents who wanted to give so much to their children, which most did not have in their childhood. We were left to play and roam outdoors to make our own fun. We had the best toys and the best music.

And yet we lived in tumultuous times – the Cold War, Civil Rights, Integration and the Kennedy Assassination through the killings of Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King.

Hopefully we came out as loving, caring, sharing adults whose experiences made us better people and gave us the ability to show appreciation and gratitude for the neighborhood and experiences which enriched us and our loved ones.

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Motley Cemetery

G.C. (Cleve) Motley’s foot was buried on June 5, 1911, after he was thrown from his horse and his foot got caught in his stirrups.  He was dragged for some distance.  The broken foot got infected and was amputated.

John J. Motley’s arm was buried in 1894.  The arm was mangled in a cotton gin accident at Reinhardt.  It was amputated above the elbow.  

As the family tells the story, he was plagued by ghost pains.  He felt like ants were crawling all over his arm.

They dug up the box containing the arm, and sure enough – it was crawling with ants. 

They built him a new, airtight box and the problem was gone.

Zachariah Motley settled on the property in 1856.

The Mickey Mouse Club had a serial based on the Hardy Boys Novel, The Tower Gate Mystery, by Franklin W. Dixon which included an old house with “secrets contained.”  The house on TV resembled the old Motley Mansion.

No comments:

Post a Comment