Details for Crystal Springs Dance Pavilion

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507018273

Data

Marker Number 18273
Atlas Number 5507018273
Marker Title Crystal Springs Dance Pavilion
Index Entry Crystal Springs Dance Pavilion
Address 5336 White Settlement Road
City Fort Worth
County Tarrant
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 649516
UTM Northing 3625859
Subject Codes business topics; water topics; music
Marker Year 2015
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42" with post
Marker Text Samuel “Papa Sam” Cunningham was excavating for gravel at this site in 1918 when he discovered an underground spring. Cunningham built a swimming pool and a covered shelter and opened for business in 1925 as Crystal Springs Dancing and Swimming. The popularity of the dance hall was driven by the house band, The Light Crust Doughboys. Sponsored by the Light Crust Flour Company and performing a regular radio show on KFJZ, the Doughboys featured Bob Wills on fiddle and Milton Brown on vocals. Over the course of their 1930-32 shows at Crystal Springs, Wills and Brown pioneered a fusion of Honky-tonk and jazz that would later become known as Western Swing. They consistently packed the 900-person dance floor for late night romps, and Crystal Springs was so popular that Cunningham’s son, Henry, ran a bus to transport crowds from downtown Fort Worth. Some sources even hold that famous gangsters such as Bonnie and Clyde, Machine Gun Kelly and Pretty Boy Floyd visited Crystal Springs. In 1932, Brown and Wills both left the band to start their own separate projects. Wills formed the Texas Playboys and left for Oklahoma, while Brown stayed in Fort Worth. In 1933, Fort Worth radio news called Brown “the King of Hillbilly Bands.” Milton Brown and his Musical Brownies continued to play at Crystal Springs until his tragic death in a 1936 car accident. After this loss, Crystal Springs entered a slow decline; in 1966, the old dance hall was destroyed by a fire. In 2011, the Texas legislature named Western Swing the “official state music of Texas,” commemorating the unique genre that Wills and Brown created at Crystal Springs.