Every accounting of Dallas’ previous tells the identical story: Ever since John Neely Bryan planted his cabin on the east financial institution of the Trinity in 1841, land possession has opened the door to energy and status.
That’s why it’s so unjust that lacking from these historical past books is the title of Anderson Bonner — a barely constructed man who towered over the a number of thousand acres he amassed in what’s right now North Dallas.
His achievement is all of the extra consequential provided that Bonner was born into slavery and, upon his 1865 emancipation in Texas, was left homeless and disadvantaged of being taught even find out how to signal his title.
Greater than a century after the demise of this pioneer and businessman, our metropolis is about to make proper Bonner’s omission from the story of Dallas.
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The dedication Sept. 10 of a public sculpture by artist Andrew F. Scott and the disclosing of a state historic marker will happen the place Bonner’s White Rock Creek homestead as soon as stood.
The 44 acres simply north of Forest Lane and west of North Central Expressway turned a metropolis park bearing Bonner’s title in 1976 — however with no clarification of why.
“Anderson Bonner was an anomaly for his time, doing one thing that appears miraculous, actually unattainable — to accumulate possibly shut to three,000 acres of land,” researcher George Keaton Jr. says. “But his accomplishments have been ignored.”
Keaton is the founder and director of Remembering Black Dallas Inc., which spearheaded this recognition and is dedicated to doing the identical for all the opposite forgotten tales in our historical past.
The primary document of Anderson Bonner exhibits up on the 1849 “stock of property” of a slaveholder in Limestone County, Ala. After the person’s demise, information present his spouse moved the family, together with Bonner, to Dallas.
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By 1870, 5 years after his emancipation, Bonner had registered to vote and purchased his first 25 acres. Quickly he started to lease homes and their surrounding land to sharecroppers who grew cotton, corn and fruits, and he used these earnings to purchase extra property.
By plowing most of his capital again into land purchases, Bonner turned maybe the most important landowner north of downtown by the early 1900s.
He and his spouse, Ann Eliza, had 10 youngsters whom they raised within the house alongside White Rock Creek. Ann Eliza died in 1903 when an oil lamp explosion burned down their house.
Bonner constructed a brand new house simply to the east on land that his descendants finally would promote to grow to be the house of Medical Metropolis Dallas.
After Bonner’s passing in 1920, he was buried within the historic White Rock Coloured Union Cemetery, which is now White Rock Backyard of Recollections Cemetery.
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Fifty or so family members nonetheless reside in North Texas, together with Nepha Bonner Love, one in every of Bonner’s great-granddaughters. Often known as Aunt Faye to many of the household, the 95-year-old is Bonner’s oldest surviving relative.
I bought the prospect Tuesday to take a seat with Aunt Faye, together with Keaton and Bonner’s great-great-grandson Antonia Suber, on the spot the place the household patriarch will quickly be honored.
Aunt Faye, who will unveil the historic marker, nonetheless lives off Forest Lane on property that’s been in her household for generations.
She was raised by her grandparents, who handed alongside tales about Anderson Bonner’s expertise as a farmer and businessman who acquired appreciable wealth. She additionally remembers anecdotes about his Christian devotion and love for household reunions alongside White Rock Creek.
“Most of all, he was an individual who beloved his household and at all times wished them to do good,” she instructed me. “He believed in his household and he believed in his neighborhood.”
Bonner, who was denied even probably the most primary education, was adamant that each one youthful relations get an training. The primary campus for Black college students in North Dallas, throughout segregation days, was the Anderson Bonner Faculty.
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He was additionally a beneficiant man and allowed everybody entry to his prime land alongside the creek to hunt, fish and swim. Even into the Fifties, the unique homestead was the positioning of the neighborhood’s annual Juneteenth celebrations.
Suber credit Aunt Faye and her vivid storytelling with instilling in him a love for the household’s historical past. He lives in close by Hamilton Park and is main restoration efforts on the cemetery the place Bonner and lots of different relations are buried.
Suber, who tells Anderson Bonner’s story each likelihood he will get, stated not one of the household was certain a tribute to the landowner would ever come.
“To have the ability to sit right here on his authentic land and look out at what’s to be here’s a long-awaited dream come true,” he stated.
Among the many household photographs Suber has collected is one which exhibits relations farming alongside the airplane hanger that may finally grow to be the Olla Podrida purchasing advanced on Coit Highway.
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Bonner’s land as soon as stretched east from White Rock Creek throughout what’s now Central Expressway to Hamilton Park.
In 1987, Eunice Bonner Turner, one in every of Bonner’s granddaughters who has since handed away, instructed Dallas Morning Information columnist Norma Adams Wade that unhealthy enterprise offers and dishonest patrons price Bonner and his grown youngsters dearly.
Turner and different kin offered a lot of what remained of the holdings within the Seventies, paving the best way for the hospital and different business improvement within the space.
Keaton persevered for years on behalf of the Bonner household, and it was unattainable to measure whose smile was the most important as we regarded on the newly put in sculpture. I can inform you that Aunt Faye’s eyes sparkled much more brightly than her fancy bejeweled cap.
The colourful metal sculpture honoring Bonner is a sankofa hen, derived from a western Africa language in what’s now Ghana. Artist Scott instructed me that the phrase and the shape each signify “return and fetch it.”
“Within the Ashanti tradition in Ghana, it states that it’s important to have an understanding of your previous to be ready to step into your future,” he stated.
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Scott, whom town’s Workplace of Arts and Tradition commissioned to create the piece, is an affiliate professor of artwork and expertise on the College of Texas at Dallas.
He knew the sculpture should hit the mark in two methods: It should really feel prefer it belongs within the area and, extra importantly, it should draw individuals into the story of Anderson Bonner.
On one aspect is a bronze inlay of Bonner’s face, a visage based mostly on century-old pictures and sculpted digitally with state-of-the-art expertise. On the opposite are particulars of the Bonner story, written by great-grandson Harold Bonner.
That is Scott’s first public artwork venture for town he now calls house and he’s honored that it’s in remembrance to such a big man.
“That I may be the vessel to understand this concept, which got here from the neighborhood and the Bonner household, that was at all times in my thoughts as I labored and accomplished this venture,” Scott stated.
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Whether or not attending the formal ceremony or visiting by yourself, I hope Dallas residents will go to this beautiful spot, one which so many people have pushed previous for years with no information of its significance.
Our metropolis is fortunate to have a bunch like Remembering Black Dallas to carry forth these components of native historical past that may in any other case be ceaselessly disregarded and forgotten.
Dedication
The general public dedication ceremony will happen at 10 a.m. Sept.10 at Anderson Bonner Park, 12000 Park Central Drive, Dallas.
“Everyone went crazy in the plane. It was bonkers. Everyone was yelling, and at the end, the pilot made the announcement and everyone started chanting ‘new crew, new crew’,” Ruhlman.
“I have to go to work. I’m obviously not going to be able to work on Monday. I was supposed to arrive in Auckland on Friday morning,” Ruhlman said.
Carina Fischer, of Remuera, described the scene in the terminal as “a nightmare”.
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Fischer said: “Everyone is crying. Kids are screaming.”
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She said a relative had helped her buy a hotel room, but she had been washing her clothes in the sink and drying them with a hairdryer.
She was also worried about her child who has ADHD, saying he was without his medication as well.
She claimed American Airlines was “not helpful, not helpful at all”.
Ruhlman echoed that sentiment: “They literally don’t care that they ruined people’s holidays and so many plans – and sanity.”
She said a group of passengers were planning to write to the airline’s chief executive asking for compensation.
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“I’m so tired and still in my same clothes as Wednesday. It’s Monday …”
American Airlines was approached for comment on Saturday, but had yet to respond by Monday morning.
Another passenger, Sarah Botwright was due to be in New Zealand for a holiday to see her friend, said she had to be home in Ohio and she would likely have to cancel her whole trip to Godzone.
“My luggage will be going to New Zealand regardless of whether I go or not, though,” she said.
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“It’s just insane,” she said of the situation.
Local daily paper the Dallas Morning News reported more than 600 flights to and from Dallas Fort Worth International Airport and Dallas Love Field had been cancelled as of 5pm Friday (12pm, Saturday, NZ).
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More than 800 flights were also delayed. American Airlines flights were the most impacted by the delays, the Dallas Morning News said.
The paper said the delays were due to a snowstorm in North Texas on Thursday which left a dumping of snow and icy conditions.
Raphael Franks is an Auckland-based reporter who covers breaking news. He joined the Herald as a Te Rito cadet in 2022.
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Dallas Stars (27-13-1, in the Central Division) vs. Ottawa Senators (20-18-3, in the Atlantic Division)
Ottawa, Ontario; Sunday, 5 p.m. EST
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BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Stars -138, Senators +117; over/under is 5.5
BOTTOM LINE: The Ottawa Senators host the Dallas Stars after the Stars defeated the Montreal Canadiens 2-1 in a shootout.
Ottawa has a 10-7-1 record in home games and a 20-18-3 record overall. The Senators have gone 11-5-2 in games their opponents commit more penalties.
Dallas has an 11-8-0 record in road games and a 27-13-1 record overall. The Stars have gone 13-6-1 in games their opponents commit more penalties.
The matchup Sunday is the second time these teams square off this season. The Stars won 4-2 in the last matchup. Roope Hintz led the Stars with two goals.
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TOP PERFORMERS: Joshua Norris has scored 14 goals with nine assists for the Senators. Ridly Greig has four goals and one assist over the past 10 games.
Jason Robertson has 10 goals and 24 assists for the Stars. Wyatt Johnston has four goals and seven assists over the last 10 games.
LAST 10 GAMES: Senators: 4-5-1, averaging 2.3 goals, 3.6 assists, 4.4 penalties and 10.2 penalty minutes while giving up 2.9 goals per game.
Stars: 8-1-1, averaging 3.2 goals, 5.6 assists, 2.4 penalties and 4.8 penalty minutes while giving up two goals per game.
INJURIES: Senators: None listed.
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Stars: None listed.
___
The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
DALLAS — Volunteers laced up their sneakers and beautified Dallas’ Fair Park neighborhood Saturday morning as part of the MLK Fest Dallas 2025, which aims to reduce blight and promote public art.
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Volunteers started off at the MLK Community Center and were assigned to clean up one of eight zones in South Dallas. People mowed grass, renovated homes, and painted a mural.
“It brings community together. A good friend of mine says community and unity are common unity, so we love all of it. We just want to be able to revitalize this place and give the community a sense of pride or ownership and give that back to all,” said Paul Franklin, community outreach director with the Walls Project.
Hundreds of volunteers braved the cold and came together for the large-scale community cleanup. The event brought together people from non-profits, churches, and businesses. The event aims to clean up blight while honoring the life of Martin Luther King Jr.
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“This is just another part of how our community celebrates the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King, to exemplify how important that is and how that connects us all to each other,” said Shawna Nesbitt, vice president of UT Southwestern Medical Center.
UT Southwestern Medical Center had about 160 volunteers who signed up. One of their projects included painting a mail room and bike rack at an apartment complex. Volunteers also picked up trash, cleared weeds, and spoke with those experiencing homelessness.
“I’m going to speak to the people that we see that are possibly unsheltered in tents and inform them of the center here at Fair Park that just recently opened the shelter,” said Jeremy Connally, an owner with the Epiphany Foundation.
The day ends with a block party at the MLK Community Center and a gala at the Renaissance Center.