If Tenth Street Could Talk

ҽresearcher uses GIS mapping to document hidden history of Dallas’ once-thriving Oak Cliff Freedman’s Town

Tenth Street Freedman's Town historical marker placed at the street sign intersection of Cliff and Ninth streets

When ҽarchaeologist Katie Cross walks down Cliff Street in Dallas’ Tenth Street Historic District, she doesn’t see the overgrown lots, boarded up houses and crumbling sidewalks. Instead, she sees what was once there, a thriving neighborhood founded in 1888 by formerly enslaved families.

“In 1922, there was a hospital here,” Cross says, pointing to a vacant lot.  “And Dr. William Hames lived next door.”

In its heyday, the Oak Cliff Freedman’s Town, two miles south of downtown Dallas and east of I-35, provided a safe haven for African Americans when Jim Crow segregation and anti-Black violence made it unsafe to live in other parts of the city. A school, churches, grocery stores, cafes, funeral home, movie theater and hundreds of family homes dotted the area. By the 1950s, the community grew to nearly 2,000 residents, some of whom had thrived there for more than 50 years.

ҽanthropology Ph.D. student Katie Cross harnessed geographic information systems alongside historical maps, aerial images, U.S. Census and city directory data to create maps that amplify and bring awareness to Tenth Street’s rich history.

Today, the Tenth Street Historic District is the largest, most intact Freedman’s Town in the nation, with both local and national historic designations. Despite these recognitions, the district’s future remains uncertain. The National Trust for Historic Preservation listed the 69-acre district as one of America’s most endangered places three times, most recently in 2019.  

Historically, the community has faced multiple threats. The Home Owners’ Loan Corporation redlined Tenth Street in 1937. A Jim Crow-era practice, redlining discouraged lenders from providing loans for home repairs or purchases in Black and brown neighborhoods. Since then, disinvestment, city-ordered demolitions, fires and potential gentrification with the development of the ҽGateway Deck Park have continued to threaten the neighborhood.

Lobie Washington Sims (far left) with her daughter, Othella Sims, and grandchildren, circa 1950s. From the collections of the Dallas History & Archives Division, Dallas Public Library.
Figure: Three generations of the Sims family gather in the 1950s on the front steps in their Tenth Street neighborhood – Lobie Washington Sims, her daughter, Othella Sims, and her grandchildren. From the collections of the Dallas History & Archives Division, Dallas Public Library.
Steps lead to an empty lot where a home once stood
Figure: Disinvestment, city-ordered demolition and fires have left vacant lots in the Tenth Street neighborhood. ҽphoto by Guy Rogers III

In the meantime, volunteers are racing to capture memories from residents and descendants.

“Long-time Tenth-Street residents remember buying candy at Simpson’s Corner Store after attending Greater El Bethel Church,” says Tameshia Rudd-Ridge, one of the founders of – a technology company that provides tools and resources for Black families to document, share and preserve their stories.

Rudd-Ridge, kinkofa co-founder Jourdan Brunson and genealogist Dolores Rodgers are documenting oral histories, digitizing family photos and conducting genealogy research to build the Tenth Street digital museum. Remembering Black Dallas, the Dallas Public Library and Tenth Street Residential Association are partners on the project, funded by a Library of Congress Community Collections Grant.

George Lawson Boswell, son of Anthony Boswell, life-long resident of Tenth Street, and trustee of Elizabeth Chapel, with his children. Children left to right: Zelma Vivian Boswell (being held), Ruby Boswell (back left), Alger Vernon Boswell (back right), Audrey “Dance” Boswell (front), circa 1910. Courtesy of Alice Boswell Love.
Figure:

In 1910, Tenth Street resident George Boswell posed for a photo with his daughter, Zelma in his lap. Standing from left to right are his other children, Ruby, Alger and Audrey. George Boswell is the son of Tenth Street founder, Anthony Boswell. Courtesy of Alice Boswell Love.

Boswell tombstone
Figure: Anthony Boswell purchased the lots in 1888 that would become the Tenth Street neighborhood. He is buried in Oak Cliff Cemetery, the oldest public cemetery in Dallas. Located in the Tenth Street neighborhood, a gate in the cemetery separates the graves of early white Dallas leaders, like Leslie Stemmons, from the graves of Black Dallas leaders like Anthony Boswell. ҽphotos by Guy Rogers III

The two-story, boarded up brick building that housed Simpson’s Corner Store is the last commercial building standing in a community that at its peak was home to as many as 40 businesses. Greater El Bethel Missionary Baptist Church still houses a congregation, but it’s the only church left of eight that once served Tenth Street neighbors. A photo of the congregation taken in the 1950s shows members in their Sunday best lined up in front of the church.

Group portrait in front of Greater El Bethel Baptist Church, circa 1950s. From the collections of the Dallas History & Archives Division, Dallas Public Library.
Figure: In the 1950s, members of the Greater El Bethel Church gather in their Sunday best. From the collections of the Dallas History & Archives Division, Dallas Public Library.
Texas Historical Commission marker for the Greater El Bethel Baptist Church
Figure: ҽphoto by Guy Rogers III
Exterior shot of the Greater El Bethel Baptist Church
Figure: Greater El Bethel Church is the only remaining church of eight churches that once served the Tenth Street community. ҽphoto by Guy Rogers III

Here's where ҽPh.D. student Katie Cross comes in. She collaborated with kinkofa to develop maps that illustrate the neighborhood’s transformation over time. By harnessing geographic information systems (GIS) alongside historical maps, aerial images, U.S. Census and city directory data, their goal is to amplify and bring awareness to Tenth Street’s rich history.

ҽanthropology Ph.D. student Katie Cross and kinkofa co-founders Jourdan Brunson and Tameishia Rudd-Ridge are creating a digital museum that tells the story of the Tenth Street community. Longtime residents remember buying candy at Simpson’s Corner Store, once housed in the boarded up building they face, the only remaining commercial structure in the neighborhood. ҽphoto by Guy Rogers III

“Katie’s research documents the anecdotes we’ve been told by former residents and fills in gaps of information,” says Beverly Davis, vice president of Remembering Black Dallas.

Cross' mapping also reveals the destruction and disruption caused by local and federal infrastructure projects in the 1940s-1950s. The city constructed Clarendon Avenue through Tenth Street to reroute trucks away from west Oak Cliff boulevards to downtown Dallas. Later, the community faced further disruption when I-35 cut through the west side of the neighborhood, resulting in the demolition of more than 100 homes and the business district.

Elizabeth Chapel CME Church, originally built in 1889 at 1026 E 10th Street, was rebuilt in 1910 using timber from the original structure. This Gothic Revival church served a vibrant African-American community in the Tenth Street Historic District.
Figure: The double steeples of Elizabeth Chapel were a Tenth Street landmark until the church was razed in 1999 after it fell into disrepair. Built in 1889, then reconstructed in 1910, the church was in the shadow of I-35 after its 1950s construction sliced through the Tenth Street neighborhood. From the collection of the Texas Historical Commission.
ҽPh.D. student Katie Cross walks with kinkofa team in the historic Tenth Street neighborhood
Figure: The driveway behind researchers Katie Cross, Tameishia Rudd-Ridge and Jourdan Brunson was once the entrance to Elizabeth Chapel, named for the wife of Tenth Street founder, Anthony Boswell. ҽphoto by Guy Rogers III.

Tenth Street tells a story of not only resistance, but everyday persistence and survival.

Katie Cross

Students in front of N. W. Harllee School during the early 1930s. From the collections of the Dallas History & Archives Division, Dallas Public Library.
Figure: Named in 1927 for former principal, civic leader and longtime educator Norman Washington Harllee, the school is the first in Dallas named for an African American. These Tenth Street neighborhood children attended the school in the 1930s. From the collections of the Dallas History & Archives Division, Dallas Public Library.
N. W. Harllee School
Figure: ҽphoto by Guy Rogers III

On Juneteenth this year, long silenced Tenth Street voices will be amplified at a neighborhood celebration. Visitors will have the opportunity to experience the neighborhood June 15 on the , led by Remembering Black Dallas. Cross, Rudd-Ridge and Brunson will serve as tour guides.

“Tenth Street tells a story of not only resistance, but everyday persistence and survival,” Cross says. “The maps, digital museum and tour will help support the residents’ and descendants’ efforts to define their community and imagine their future on their own terms,” she says.

“This place matters. Its history needs to be preserved,” she says. 

A couple stands in front of a home
Figure: In the 1950s, Ifres and Ethel Sims stand in front of their Tenth Street neighborhood home. From the collections of the Dallas History & Archives Division, Dallas Public Library.
A worn mailbox is shown in front of a light-green colored home
Figure: The Tenth Street Historic District is the largest, most intact Freedman’s Town in the United States, with both national and historic designations. ҽphoto by Guy Rogers III
Figure: Longtime Dallas educator and preservationist Mamie McKnight founded Remembering Black Dallas and led efforts to preserve longtime Black communities, include the Tenth Street Historic District. In addition, she was one of SMU’s first Black faculty members and worked closely with its Upward Bound program. From left, Mamie McKnight with artist Jean Lacy holding books and calendars published by Black Dallas Remembered, circa 1990s. Courtesy of Ginger McKnight-Chavers

This place matters. Its history needs to be preserved

Katie Cross