It Takes a Heritage Village: This Cedars-Area Park Is a Treasure Trove of Dallas History

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Cartoon courtesy of The Dallas Morning News

Dallas Heritage Village is a 13-acre haven of calm in the middle of our bustling city. It allows you to stop, step back in time, and see what life was like long ago.

The area was once a municipal park, but now it houses the most extensive collection of nineteenth century homes and commercial buildings in Texas.

However, If it weren’t for a dedicated group of ladies, it would not exist.

Dallas Heritage Village
The house that started it all, The Milermore.

A Standoff at Miller Mansion

Back in 1966, the park had fallen into a sad state, and the city wanted to revive it. At the same time, a group of prominent and determined women led by Mrs. Sawnie Aldredge, stood on the front porch of the Miller Mansion in Oak Cliff and won their standoff against the bulldozers lined up to demolish it.

Dallas Heritage Village

This incident led to the founding of the Heritage Society in the 1960s and a new purpose for what was then called Old City Park.

Christened Millermore, the two-story house was given to the people of Dallas by the Heritage Society, and the revival began. It’s now an idyllic park filled with authentic historic structures that have been moved here over the past 40 years from locations all over the Metroplex.

Authentic History in Downtown Dallas

Dallas Heritage Village
Dallas Heritage Village

It’s so authentic that photographers and filmmakers have relied on it as a location for years. It certainly saved my bacon a couple of times.

As a young photo stylist, I was charged with finding a general store to showcase Mr. Herman Lay in his early years, before we were all eating Frito pie! Dallas Heritage Village was a perfect location. I also had to kit out a baseball team in 1920s gear for a Dr Pepper ad, and the park served me once more as a period-perfect location.

Dallas Heritage Village
Photography of the MKT Depot courtesy of Charles Davis Smith, FAIA.
Dallas Heritage Village
The Pilot Grove Church. Photo courtesy of Charles Davis Smith, FAIA

“The Dallas Heritage Village is a treasure for our city,” former curator and present Dallas Landmark Commissioner Evelyn Montgomery said. “It offers an experience of our past you cannot get anywhere else. As an assemblage, it’s now old enough to be on the National Register of Historic Places.” 

Dallas Heritage Village
The Sullivan House has almost been restored by Siebler Remodeling & Historic Preservation.
Detail of restoration on The Sullivan House

More Than History

The beauty of Dallas Heritage Village is that it is much more than an homage to history.

Not only has it served the film and photography industry, but it also serves the general public. You can rent small or medium venues for events, get married in the Pilot Grove Church, take a frontier blacksmithing class, or just bring the kids out for some fresh air and to pet the donkeys Waylon and Willie.

The Sullivan House before restoration. Photo courtesy of New Hights Photography.
Photo courtesy of New Hights Photography.

The village has sparked many Dallas traditions, from the Old Fashioned Fourth to the longstanding Candlelight weekends during the Christmas holidays. The proceeds of these events and rentals help to maintain the structures, which is never-ending.

“The buildings are looked at daily,” Ron Siebler, owner of Siebler Remodeling & Historic Preservation, said. “The issue is always finding the funds to do the maintenance.”

Siebler has been a volunteer at Dallas Heritage Village for decades and has been working on restoration projects here since 2012, with his first being The Pilot Grove Church.

“Although the buildings here do not have historic designations, we approach the work in the same way,” Siebler said. 

The Miller Cabin

“Preserving these structures gives us a unique opportunity to tell the diverse stories of Dallas and North Texas.” Deputy Director at Dallas Heritage Village, Preston Cooley, said. “We have buildings that represent many different histories and people. Our setting of 13 acres makes us the perfect place for families, couples, and individuals to not only learn but to have fun and engage in the community. And we have a bright future as we rethink how a museum created in the mid 20th century can move forward with purpose and relevance in the 21st century. We have big plans for not only our structures but for our daily exhibits and programming!”

We encourage our newcomers to discover the history of your new city, and for those that have been here for a minute, get out of the house and rediscover Dallas Heritage Village.

As Montgomery said, “It’s a treasure trove!”

Karen is a senior columnist at Candy’s Media and has been writing stories since she could hold a crayon. She is a globe-trotting, history-loving eternal optimist who would find it impossible to live well without dogs, Tex-Mex, and dark chocolate. She covers luxury properties and historic preservation for Candys Dirt.

3 Comments

  1. Maria Romero on July 8, 2021 at 11:17 am

    I was a first grader, and I was privileged to see the Miller Mansion and Cabin on a field trip. I went to William Brown Miller Elementary School. My grandparents lived in the City Park area off of Beaumont.

  2. PeterK on January 26, 2024 at 1:31 pm

    “showcase Mr. Herman Lay in his early years, before we were all eating Frito pie!”
    Herman Lay had nothing to do with Fritos. we were eating them well before he arrived on the scene from Atlanta Ga
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fritos
    “The H.W. Lay & Company merged with The Frito Company in September 1961, creating the largest-selling snack food company in the United States, the Frito-Lay corporation.[1][2][10] ”
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herman_Lay

    • Karen Eubank on January 26, 2024 at 1:57 pm

      Peter, kind of off topic, but I’ll bite. I was working on an annual report for the Frito-Lay company, and they wanted to show Mr. Lay in his early years because he started out in the grocery business.

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