Deep Ellum, Dallas

Deep Ellum is a neighborhood composed largely of arts and entertainment venues near downtown in East Dallas, Texas. The name is based on a corruption of the area's principal thoroughfare, Elm Street. Older alternative uses include Deep Elm and Deep Elem.

A skater along Main Street in Deep Ellum

The neighborhood lies directly east of the elevated I-45/US 75 (unsigned I-345) freeway and extends to Exposition Avenue, connected to downtown by, from north to south, Pacific, Elm, Main, Commerce, and Canton streets. The neighborhood is north of Exposition Park and south of Bryan Place.

History

Early days

After independence from the Mexico, Texas became a part of the United States in 1845. After the slave liberation in Texas, many slaves from Texas and nearby states built their houses and cropped their land in the future Deep Ellum, which was one of the largest African-American communities.[1] This community holds the most history in the Dallas area.

Economics development

When the first train came into Dallas in 1872, 500 African-Americans were already living there.[2] Throughout the 1870s, the new railroad provided various positions and opportunities for residents nearby, which thrived as the African-American cultural and residential center since the 1870s.[3] Even some theaters and entertainment areas were constructed for neighborhoods in the 1890s.

Fading of Deep Ellum

During the period of the Great Depression in the 1930s, African-Americans received assistance from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) for African-Americans, which positively influenced the area. Although African-American neighborhoods pulled together during these hard times, some negative reports derailed their efforts by exposing African-Americans’ terrible living conditions.[4] These reports possibly led to higher crime rates and increased prostitution. In 1940, the government started to revise the law to update the city appearance following the national city beautification movement. At the same time, some changes in zoning and rebuilding the “slum” started from 1943 to 1945.

Highway’s influence towards Deep Ellum

In 1912, the concept of "highways" first entered the American consciousness. Based on support from the government of Dallas, new highways were designed at a rapid rate. In the early 1940s, the railway was torn out with strong reproach from the residents, causing problems for them. However, the highways' negative influence on those neighborhoods was not reported, and it was a significant reason for the low quality of living for black people. This successfully boosted business in Deep Ellum, but did not last too long. A new highway known as the Central Expressway was started in 1947 and completed by 1949. It departed from Elm town to downtown Dallas and decreased the African- American population. After two decades of debating between the city bureau and residents, most blocks from Deep Elm were removed by the requirement of the city’s plan. In 1968, the freeway construction commenced, and the majority of residents were asked to move to other places.[3] As Prior. M (2005) said, “historical communities in Deep Ellum were leveled to the ground because excessive speculation during the period of rising interest rates had caused the “bubble” of the real estate boom to explode of the 1970s and the “bust” of the 1980s.”[5]

Later story

Deep Ellum, with its colorful history and unique culture, experienced gentrification in the late 1990s. More affluent white citizens replaced the black community because of increasing property values, which drove many homeowners out of Deep Ellum and into less expensive housing elsewhere.[5] Meanwhile, many African-American artists tried to save Deep Ellum as a historic district, and their efforts worked. The City of Dallas remains two blocks within historical Deep Ellum, though the cultural and historical meaning changed and partially disappeared over time. In the 2000 Census, Dallas had 119,624 residents and African-Americans were 20.5% of the total population and 20.2% in 2005.[6] The Census resources from 1970s to 2000s show how African-Americans diminished and disappeared.

Industrial development

Robert S. Munger built his first cotton-gin factory, the Continental Gin Company, in a series of brick warehouses along Elm Street and Trunk Avenue in Deep Ellum in 1888. As the business grew to become the largest manufacturer of cotton-processing equipment in the United States, Munger expanded the factory by adding additional structures along Trunk and Elm in 1912 and 1914. A Dallas Landmark District, the industrial complex was converted to loft apartments in 1997.[7]

In 1914, Henry Ford selected Deep Ellum as the site for one of his earliest automobile plants.[8] Designed by architect John Graham, who designed many regional facilities for Ford during the early 1900s, the building was constructed as an assembly plant for the famous Ford Model T. The plant remained in this location at 2700 Canton Street until the mid-1930s; Adam Hats moved into the four-story brick and terracotta structure in 1959. The Dallas Landmark was converted to loft apartments in 1997, adding yet another layer of history to the building.

The Knights of Pythias Temple, also known as the Union Bankers Trust Building, is located at 2551 Elm Street. Opened in 1916, the building was designed by African-American architect William Sidney Pittman, the state's first black architect and the son-in-law of Booker T. Washington. In addition to serving as the state headquarters for the Knights, the temple housed some of the city's earliest offices for black doctors, dentists, and lawyers and served as the social and cultural center for the African-American community until the late 1930s. The building was Pittman's largest built work.[9]

Other Dallas Landmarks within Deep Ellum include The Palace Shop at 2814 Main Street (around 1913) and Parks Brothers Warehouse at 2639 Elm Street (around 1923).

Entertainment district

Trees in 2017

The 1990s were a high point for Deep Ellum as Dallas' liveliest entertainment district. At that time, it had become such a popular attraction that the streets often were blocked off to traffic, especially on weekends. It also spawned several events, such as the Deep Ellum Film Festival and Deep Ellum Arts Festival.

By 1991, Deep Ellum had 57 bars and nightclubs. Restaurants, tattoo parlors, other diverse retail shops, and increasing high-rent residential loft space were available. Over time, though, the streets became much emptier on weekend nights than in the 1990s. New events such as the Culture of Deep Ellum (CODE) events, and Dallas Rock Meetup Group monthly festival, involve multivenue, multiband performances that help to maintain Deep Ellum's viability as a live-music hotspot.

Notable businesses of the 1990s and beyond include The Curtain Club, Deep Ellum Live (closed in 2004), Trees (closed late 2005, reopened August 2009), 2826, Club Dada (closed and reopened 2006), The Angry Dog (a restaurant, still in business), Monica's Aca y Alla (a restaurant, closed in 2012), Looker Hair Group (a salon), Galaxy Club (closed early 2007), the Green Room (closed September 2006, reopened 2010, closed 2011, reopened June 2013), and The Red Blood Club (closed and reopened 2007, and then closed again in 2008, and then reopened again in March 2014). Lizard Lounge stood for 28 years as a mecca of electronic music and Goth/post-punk, but closed in May 2020.[10] For lovers of electronic music, a notable small dancing club in East Dallas, called "It'll Do", reopened on June 16, 2019[11] to bring a spot for lovers of electronic music to congregate.

One notable event involved Russell Hobbs, the former owner of Theatre Gallery and the Prophet Bar, who in early 1988, converted to Christianity, closed his two still-popular clubs, and opened The Door, a Christian-oriented venue. An interesting success story involved Eduardo Greene, owner of Eduardo's Aca y Alla. In the mid-1990s, Greene divorced his wife, had a highly publicized sex change, and reopened under her new name, Monica's Aca y Alla.

Crime

Rules for Deep Ellum's people

For a time, Deep Ellum struggled with a perception of a high crime rate that made people reluctant to visit the area. In mid-2006, local papers had begun to report the near-demise of the neighborhood, as a large percentage of the long-time live-music venues had closed that year, leaving mostly clubs oriented more towards 'hip hop' and other music, dancing and drinking, and radically altering the "feel". In 2007, several additional small and medium clubs had closed, although new live-music venues often sprang up.

Perhaps the most known and tragic crime associated with the area that garnered nationwide attention was the murder of two children by their father. On May 2, 2001, John Battaglia murdered his daughters Faith and Liberty in his loft in Deep Ellum.[12]

Things began turning around in 2009 and 2010, as evidenced by new bar, live music venue and restaurant openings. Some of the recent and planned openings include the relaunch of the near-legendary venue Trees, old favorites such as Club Dada and The Green Room, Tucker's Blues, The Boiler Room, Anvil Pub, and La Grange (now punk-rock hotspot Three Links).

The area then was in a state of positive transition and on the upswing. In 2007, the City of Dallas encouraged large-scale residential, multifamily dwelling construction in Deep Ellum, in hopes of making it more financially successful.[13][14]

In 2014 and 2015, several projects that improved infrastructure were undertaken, such as a comprehensive repaving of the streets and roads surfaces to add more parking and make the rough and worn sections of the pavement much better for vehicular and foot traffic. Deep Ellum continues to maintain and grow its place as a cultural and musical center for the DFW Metroplex. Despite the decline of a decade ago, visitors can now walk down Elm Street on a weekend and witness hundreds of pedestrians, bicycles, motorcycles, and automobiles, with dozens of venues, restaurants, storefronts, and parking lots.

In 2017, the Deep Ellum Foundation established a public safety program to address crime and safety concerns within the neighborhood. The addition of Dallas Police Department supervisors and officers during the area's busiest hours has led the way in making Deep Ellum a safer place for all who work and visit in the area.

In 2018, the foundation hired its first senior manager of public safety and security, Phillip Honoré, who collaborated with business owners, residents, and city leaders to improve overall public safety in the popular entertainment and arts district. The Deep Ellum Foundation is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) corporation that exists to enhance, improve, and market the neighborhood of Deep Ellum as a whole through public safety, marketing and promotion, business development and recruitment, and general improvement efforts for the area. Reviews on the foundation's progress are mixed.

In 2018, scooter companies flooded Deep Ellum with scooters and the city was not prepared to regulate them, leading to a public-safety issue due to people riding them on the sidewalk.[15] Motorized scooters are no longer allowed to be ridden in the neighborhood on the sidewalks.[16]

In 2019, crime in Deep Ellum had a slight increase in minor crimes after years of constant decline and improvement. Until the summer of that year, several crimes in the area were reported and prosecuted.[17]

In May 2020, several businesses in Deep Ellum were vandalized and looted following a protest in downtown Dallas. A peaceful protest over the killing of George Floyd turned violent when a small group clashed with police, broke out windows, looted businesses, and set fires.[18]

Music

Jazz and blues

Deep Ellum's claim to fame has been its music. By the 1920s, the neighborhood had become a hotbed for early jazz and blues musicians, hosting the likes of Blind Lemon Jefferson, Robert Johnson, Huddie "Lead Belly" Ledbetter, and Bessie Smith in Deep Ellum clubs such as The Harlem and The Palace.[19] From 1920 to 1950, the number of nightclubs, cafes, and domino parlors in Deep Ellum jumped from 12 to 20.

In 1937, a columnist described Deep Ellum as:

...[the] one spot in the city that needs no daylight saving time because there is no bedtime...[It is] the only place recorded on earth where business, religion, hoodooism, gambling, and stealing goes on at the same time without friction...Last Saturday a prophet held the best audience in this 'Madison Square Garden' in announcing that Jesus Christ would come to Dallas in person in 1939. At the same time a pickpocket was lifting a week's wages from another guy's pocket, who stood with open mouth to hear the prophecy.[20]

At the time, you could find gun and locksmith shops, clothing stores, the Cotton Club, tattoo studios, barber-shops, pawn shops, drugstores, tea rooms, loan offices, domino halls, pool halls, and walk-up hotels. On its sidewalks you could find pigeon droppers, reefer men, craps shooters, card sharps, and sellers of cocaine and marijuana.[20] Sometime around World War I, Lead Belly and Blind Lemon Jefferson got together and began composing folk tunes, with Dallas often in the lyrics. In a song called "Take A Whiff on Me":

Walked up Ellum an' I come down Main,
Tryin' to bum a nickel jes' to buy cocaine.
Ho, Ho, baby, take a whiff on me.[20]

The most famous song about the district was recorded in 1933 under the title of "Deep Elm Blues" by the Lone Star Cowboys. The song and the lyrics were derived from the Georgia Crackers’ 1927 recording, "The Georgia Black Bottom". The Shelton Brothers recorded "Deep Elem Blues" on Decca in 1935. Despite these earlier recordings, they claimed credit for the song. The lyrics narrate white men seeking immoral and illegal entertainment in an African-American part of town.[21] The Shelton Brothers iterated the name of the district in "Deep Elem Blues, No. 2", "What’s the Matter with Deep Elem", and "Deep Elm Boogie Woogie Blues". Dick Stabile and his Orchestra, the Texas Wanderers, and the Wilburn Brothers all invoked the district’s name in separate Decca pressings.[22]

"Deep Ellum Blues" was later performed by the Grateful Dead:

When you go down on Deep Ellum,
Put your money in your socks
'Cause them Women on Deep Ellum
Sho' will throw you on the rocks. (chorus)
Oh, sweet mama, your daddy's got them Deep Ellum Blues.
Oh, sweet mama, your daddy's got them Deep Ellum Blues.[20]

Bob Dylan's new album "Rough And Rowdy Ways" (release June 19, 2020) has the song "Murder Most Foul" with the line "... / When you're down on Deep Ellum, put your money in your shoe /..." (© & P Columbia Records)

Following World War II, the success of Deep Ellum started to fade. The ever-growing availability and use of the automobile led to the removal of the Houston and Texas Central railroad tracks—to make way for Central Expressway—and by 1956 the streetcar line had been removed. Businesses closed, residents moved to the suburbs and the music all but stopped. In 1969, a new elevation of Central Expressway truncated Deep Ellum, completely obliterating the 2400 block of Elm Street, viewed by many as the center of the neighborhood. By the 1970s, few original businesses remained.

1983–1999: "Glory Days of Deep Ellum"

Deep Ellum Neon Sign

In 1983, the Near East Side Area Planning Study, or "Deep Ellum Plan", was revealed to the public. The city planned to "downzone" Deep Ellum, meaning that building height, population, and street width were to be carefully monitored so as to help the neighborhood maintain an artistic, historic atmosphere. Artists and musicians began to move into the area, opening up new galleries and venues, attracting young creatives to the area. Over the course of the 1980s, Deep Ellum became well known as a hot-spot for the Dallas Punk Scene.[23]

According to Murray Hammond of Old 97's, punk and hardcore outfits as prolific as Dead Kennedys were playing at local galleries. With the insurgence of new nightclubs and venues, Deep Ellum began to explode as a local music spot. However, throughout the mid '80s, the neighborhood still faced serious safety issues, one of which being the overwhelming presence of skinheads, but as Deep Ellum continued to expand, the threats dwindled. By 1991, over 50 nightclubs and bars had opened in Deep Ellum, including Trees Dallas.[24]

During the 1990s, musical acts including Toadies, Erykah Badu, and Old 97's began to gain prominence as not only local successes, but national stars. Once Deep Ellum had gained traction as the heart of music in Dallas, popular touring artists such as Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Smashing Pumpkins, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Radiohead, The Roots, The Notorious B.I.G., and Fugazi would book shows at venues including Trees Dallas and The Bomb Factory.[24]

Street art

Murals along the Good Latimer Tunnel

In addition to live music, Deep Ellum was a hotbed for the emerging genre of street art. Many of the music venues used graffiti artists to advertise music shows.

In 1991, the city commissioned local artists to create murals along the Good-Latimer Expressway tunnel (a major entry to the neighborhood) in a project organized by artist Frank Campagna, which he named TunnelVisions. The tunnel was demolished in the spring of 2007 to make way for the DART Green Line train. In 2009, Campagna led artists in the completion of a mural project along the redesigned Good-Latimer gateway, and subsequently, additional mural projects in the adjacent art park under the I-30 overpass at Good Latimer between Commerce and Canton streets. The wide variety of images, largely in a 'graffiti' style, have long been a popular tourist attraction.

While street art is popular in Deep Ellum, a large portion of the murals in the area are commissioned by local businesses. Some of the most recognizable murals were created by Frank Campagna, owner of Kettle Art Gallery, and alternately known as the Godfather of Dallas Street Art, for legendary music venues such as Gypsy Tea Room and Trees. Most recently, the 42 mural project invited a select number of artists to paint murals throughout Deep Ellum, in hopes of passing along the history and heritage of the area.[25][26]

Transportation

Highways

(US 67, US 80, and US 175 have all previously passed through parts of Deep Ellum, but are now routed onto nearby freeways.)

Trains

Education

North Dallas High School serves residents north of Commerce Street

Deep Ellum is served by the Dallas Independent School District.

Residents of Deep Ellum north of Commerce Street are zoned to Ignacio Zaragoza Elementary School, Alex W. Spence Middle School and North Dallas High School.[27] Residents south of Commerce Street are zoned to Martin Luther King Jr. Learning Center (Elementary School), Billy Earl Dade Middle School, and James Madison High School.[28] Residents of the southern portion were previously zoned to City Park Elementary School in Cedars.[29]

Deep Ellum is also home to a charter secondary school, Uplift Luna Preparatory which opened in 2010.[30] It is considered a high performing school, according to state reports.


References

  1. Velin, Gabriel (2010). "Dallas Freedman's Town: One Community's Preservation within a Gentrified Environment". The Eagle Feather. doi:10.12794/tef.2010.154.
  2. Govenar, A. B., & Brakefield, J. F. (1998). Deep Ellum and Central Track : where the black and white worlds of Dallas converged. Alan B. Govenar and Jay F. Brakefield. University of North Texas Press. P. 3
  3. JOHNSON, E. (2014). From Harlem to SoHo: Perceptions of Deep Ellum. Legacies, 26(2), 28.
  4. Govenar, A. B., & Brakefield, J. F. (2013). Deep Ellum : the other side of Dallas. 1st Texas A&M University Press ed. Alan Govenar and Jay Brakefield. Texas A&M University Press.
  5. Prior, M., & Kemper, R. (2005). From Freedman's Town to Uptown: Community Transformation And Gentrifícation In Dallas, Texas. Urban Anthropology and Studies of Cultural Systems and World Economic Development, 34(2/3), 177-216. Retrieved from JSTOR 40553482
  6. US Census Bureau. (2017, January 11). Population Change for Places With Populations of 50,000 : 2000 to 2010. Retrieved from https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/dec/cph-series/cph-t/cph-t-3.html.
  7. Phillips, William H. (1994). "Making a Business of It: The Evolution of Southern Cotton Gin Patenting, 1831-1890". Agricultural History. 68 (2): 80–91. ISSN 0002-1482. JSTOR 3744404.
  8. "History – Deep Ellum Texas". Retrieved August 10, 2020.
  9. Govenar, Alan; Brakefield, Jay (2013). "William Sidney Pittman". Deep Ellum: The Other Side of Dallas. College Station: Texas A&M University Press. pp. 37–44. ISBN 978-1-60344-958-8.
  10. Gravley, Garrett (May 14, 2020). "Dallas Music Scene Takes a Huge Blow as Lizard Lounge and The Blue Light Both Shutter". Dallas Observer. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  11. "It'll Do Club Opening". YouTube. June 18, 2012. Retrieved July 21, 2019.
  12. Mervosh, Sarah. "John Battaglia, Texas death row inmate who killed daughters, loses latest appeal". The Dallas Morning News. July 15, 2015. Retrieved on March 30, 2016.
  13. "Dallas City Council Addendum from 9 April 2008 § Deep Ellum TIF District" (PDF). Dallas City Hall. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 13, 2012. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
  14. "Dallas City Council briefing from 9 May 2012 § Comprehensive plan" (PDF). Dallas City Hall. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 29, 2012. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
  15. "Dallas could add more limits on scooter rides to address safety risks". Dallas News. July 13, 2019.
  16. "Sidewalk Riding Prohibition Area" (PDF). Dallascityhall.com. Retrieved July 23, 2019.
  17. "Police and Dallasites Have It Out Over the Safety of Deep Ellum". Dmagazine.com. June 26, 2019.
  18. "Downtown businesses hit by vandalism, looting overnight (Photos)". www.bizjournals.com. Retrieved June 22, 2020.
  19. Giles Oakley (1997). The Devil's Music. Da Capo Press. p. 67. ISBN 978-0-306-80743-5.
  20. Payne, Darwin (1982). "Chapter VI: The Spirit of Enterprise". Dallas, an illustrated history. Woodland Hills, California: Windsor Publications. pp. 157–185. ISBN 0-89781-034-1.
  21. Govenar and Brakefield (2013), pp. 17–20.
  22. Govenar and Brakefield (2013), p. 25–26.
  23. Maxwell, Lisa C. (November 1, 2015). "DEEP ELLUM". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved August 3, 2018.
  24. Freedman, Pete (November 13, 2011). "An Oral History of the Dallas Music Scene Dallasobserver.com. Retrieved 2016-06-21.
  25. "The Deep Ellum Tunnel". Urban Exploration Resource.
  26. "Deep Ellum Tunnels". Lowrider Arte. Archived from the original on September 13, 2015. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
  27. Dallas ISD - Current zones for Zaragoza Elementary School, Alex W. Spence Middle, North Dallas High. Retrieved on October 21, 2019.
  28. Dallas ISD - King Learning Center, Dade Middle, and Madison HS zones. Retrieved on October 21, 2019.
  29. City Park Archived June 20, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  30. "Dallas - Downtown, East, Oak Cliff". Uplift Education.

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