Details for Flippen Homestead and the Founding of Highland Park

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5113006711

Data

Marker Number 6711
Atlas Number 5113006711
Marker Title Flippen Homestead and the Founding of Highland Park
Index Entry Flippen Homestead
Address 4800 Preston Rd.
City Dallas
County Dallas
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 705558
UTM Northing 3634548
Subject Codes farms; houses, residential buildings; land surveys, land companies, promotional towns; neighborhoods
Marker Year 1990
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text To fulfill his dream for an exclusive residential neighborhood north of Dallas, Col. John S. Armstrong in 1906 purchased 1,350 acres of land in this area, including the "Lomo Alto" Horse Farm, and secured the services of Beverly Hills' landscape architect Wilbur David Cook to lay out the suburb. Upon Armstrong's death in 1908, the Flippen-Prather Realty Co. continued plans for development of the neighborhood, which was named Highland Park (an erroneous English translation of "Lomo Alto"). In 1909, this horse farm was deeded to Armstrong's daughters, Minnie May Flippen and Johnetta Prather, each of whom was the spouse of a principal in the Flippen-Prather Realty Co. A coin was flipped to determine first choice for a homesite, and the Flippens won the toss. Dallas architect C. D. Hill designed a house for them based on George Washington's Mount Vernon. Completed in 1910, the house served as an example for attracting Dallas' elite to Highland Park. Although radically altered externally over the years, the basic Flippen homestead retains significance for its association with the founders of Highland Park and as a reflection of Dallas' early 20th-century growth. 1990

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