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This photo was taken during Elliott Roosevelt’s first visit to Fort Worth, in March 1933. It shows (L to R) Elliott Roosevelt, cowgirl Tad Lucas, and Tarrant County Sheriff J. R. “Red” Wright.
It requests a license to sell liquor at the address of t he old parking lot adjacent to 4725 Camp Bowie Blvd. The Original, one of Texas’ oldest Tex-Mex restaurants, moved to 1400 N. Main St ...
How many of these Fort Worth-area restaurants do you recognize from the 1940s to 1990s? ... owner of the newly opened El Torero Mexican Restaurant at 3619 Camp Bowie, says have a chair for lunch ...
The Murrins hope to open it this summer in a former barbecue restaurant space at 9812 Camp Bowie West Blvd. A 1951 building in west Fort Worth used as a cafe for TV’s “Landman” will become a ...
The 36th Division of the Texas National Guard unit arrived at Camp Bowie, located then in Fort Worth, in mid-December for their year's training, but before training was finished, war had been declared. On September 19, 1940, the War Department announced that a camp would be built at Brownwood, Texas. Work began at the campsite on September 27 ...
The Village at Camp Bowie location was recently home to the short-lived Blue Butterfly Cafe, a Tennessee company. Before that, it was home to the first Fort Worth location of Olivella’s Pizza ...
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For nearly a century, The Original Mexican Eats Cafe called this squat building at 4713 Camp Bowie Blvd. in west Fort Worth home. Last summer, the neighborhood fixture had to shutter its 7,500 ...