Stop Six, Fort Worth, Texas Explained

Stop Six is a neighborhood in south-east Fort Worth, Texas (USA).

Stop Six, a mostly African-American neighborhood,[1] is known for Dunbar High, whose basketball team won the high school state championship in 1993, 2002, and 2006.[2] The neighborhood's name comes from the fact that it was once the sixth stop without an otherwise identifying landmark on the Northern Texas Traction Co. Interurban electric streetcar system that ran between Fort Worth and Dallas.

History

Circa 1896, Amanda Davis, the first African-American to live in the area,[3] paid a white man and obtained 1acres of land.[4] Davis built a cabin on her property.[3] The area for a period was called Cowanville, after a couple who purchased a house in the area in 1902,[4] Alonzo and Sarah Cowan. The Brockman and Stalcup families also became a part of the community. Marcia Melton of Texas Christian University Magazine characterized Stop Six in its initial period as "a community of small farms and homesteads".[3]

By the 1920s the area's layout had developed.[4]

Cityscape

Berry Street, Miller Street, Rosedale Street, and Interstate 820 (Loop 820) form the boundaries of Stop Six.[3] Polytechnic Heights is on the other side of Village Creek.[4]

According to Melton, the community "still retains its rural flavor."[3]

Bunche-Ellington, Carver Heights, Ramey Place, Stop Six Sunrise Edition, and Village Creek are communities within the Stop Six area.[3]

Education

Stop Six is part of the Fort Worth ISD and has several public schools.[5] The district operates Dunbar High School, two middle schools, five elementary schools, and one alternative school. Stop Six's Maudrie M. Walton Elementary School was featured in the 2002 PBS documentary A Tale of Two Schools.[6]

A school developed as Stop Six formed, and it was known initially as the Prairie Chapel Colored School. The Ebenezer Missionary Baptist Church supported the school in its earliest days, and it became a part of the Sagamore Hill School District. The school moved into a wooden building, as of 2008 next to Dunbar 6th Grade Center, in 1925, with the school district paying $5,000 to have the building constructed. Area residents spent $300 to fund the construction of the school, and the Rosenwald Foundation gave $1,000 more. In the 1930s, the area became a part of the Fort Worth school district. The building was later known as Dunbar Middle School. In February 2008, the former school became the Stop Six Heritage Center.[4]

Government and infrastructure

The JPS Health Center Stop Six - Walter B. Barbour of the JPS Health Network (Tarrant County Hospital District) is in Stop Six.[7] It includes behavioral and dental services.[8] [9]

Religion

In 1878 the Ebenezer Missionary Baptist Church was constructed.[4]

Notable residents

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Lyons, Julie. "Pentecostal Preacher Sherman Allen Turns Out to Be Reverend Spanky." Dallas Observer. February 20, 2008.
  2. "Boys Basketball State Archives School Search." University Interscholastic League. Retrieved December 1, 2012.
  3. Melton. Marcia. Stop Six: A Brief History of a Fort Worth Community. Texas Christian University Magazine. Texas Christian University. Spring 2016. 2023-12-20.
  4. News: Lee. Mike. Old school focus of Stop Six effort. Fort Worth Star-Telegram. 2008-02-27. 2B. - Clipping at Newspapers.com.
  5. Web site: Historic Stop Six Initiative. Fort Worth Independent School District. 2022-07-18.
  6. Web site: A Tale of Two Schools: The Documentary – Transcript . . November 2, 2022.
  7. "JPS Health Center Stop Six - Walter B. Barbour." JPS Health Network. Retrieved on October 25, 2012.
  8. "JPS Behavioral Centers." JPS Health Network. Retrieved on October 25, 2012.
  9. "JPS Dental Centers." JPS Health Network. Retrieved on October 25, 2012.
  10. "The shot not heard round the world: the way Elmo Henderson tells it, his entire life can be boiled down to a single moment in 1972, when he stepped into the ring in San Antonio and knocked out the greatest fighter on the planet. But honestly, that's just where his story begins." Texas Monthly. December 1, 2004. Retrieved on April 5, 2011.'Texas Monthly.
  11. Web site: Theresa Powell Obituary (1952 - 2023) - Philadelphia, PA - Star-Telegram . 2023-12-12 . Legacy.com.