Best of 2021: The Most Beautiful Spanish Revival in Dallas

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Spanish Revival

[Editor’s Note: While the CandysDirt.com team takes a hot minute this holiday season to recharge the ol’ Energizers, we’re serving up our very favorite stories from 2021. Enjoy!]

Karen: This home is not just beautiful, it’s also one of the most architecturally significant houses in Dallas. It will take a buyer with class, intelligence, and a heart for history to truly appreciate all that this home means to the fabric of our culture. It’s by far one of my favorites. I’d buy it in a heartbeat if I could!


You can tell from the curb that this is a significant home, however, you may not realize that it is one of the most extraordinary examples of Spanish Revival architecture in the state, and it comes with quite the history.

Let’s start with the provenance from Virginia Savage McAlester, Willis Cecil Winters, and Prudence Mackintosh in what we consider the resource of Dallas architectural history, Great American Suburbs: The Homes of the Park Cities.

Although Hal Thomson was not strongly connected with the Spanish Revival style, he designed one of the earliest and most prominent homes of this genre in Highland Park. Completed in 1925 at 4201 Armstrong (Thomson & Swain) at the corner of Preston Road, built for the mortgage and investment broker Harry Harlan.

Spanish Revival

To the rear, Thomson extended two wings from the main body of the house to form a patio and garden, which was landscaped with lush semi-tropical plantings. A covered gallery and an open-air terrace above extended around three sides of the patio. The architect arranged the bedrooms to benefit from the natural ventilation afforded by this U-shaped plan. His rendering of the Harlan residence in the Spanish style — with its highly textured stucco surfaces — seemed entirely appropriate to the time and climate. A newspaper account of the house as it was nearing completion described the Spanish style as “a type which adapts itself better to the semitropical Dallas climate than any other.”

Spanish Revival
Spanish Revival

A Home For Dallas A-Listers

Harlan had business interests in New York and only lived here five years. He sold the home to W. H. Francis for — wait for it — $100,000. It’s mind-boggling to think that was a considerable sum in 1930. Francis was the Vice President and General Counsel of the Magnolia Petroleum Company, his wife was a noted civic leader, and their son was the Assistant Secretary of Defense. Can you imagine the conversations and the parties?

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Spanish Revival

In the 1920s, the movers and shakers of Dallas built grand houses and spared no expense. You simply cannot replicate the detail and craftsmanship of this Spanish Revival estate today. Even with an unlimited budget, you could not duplicate the work in this home. The artisans and tradesmen involved in creating an estate of this stature often did not pass down their knowledge, so this is, without a doubt, a one-of-a-kind estate. 

Spanish Revival estate
Spanish Revival estate
Just look at that decorative, hand-crafted ceiling!
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The home is awash in rich stone and brass ornamentation.

This gorgeous Spanish Revival estate sits on 1.5 acres with 14,407 square feet, six bedrooms, eight bathrooms, and a myriad of fabulous touches like an elevator, a billiards room, and the most beautiful gym I’ve seen in ages, to name only a few.

It certainly sets the tone for the street, and indeed for Highland Park. In other words, when you see it, you know you’ve arrived

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Historic But Livable

One of the true tests of any home is livability.

The Francis family owned this Spanish Revival estate from 1930 until the late 1970s. The present owners have been here for over two decades. That tells you all you need to know.

It’s not only gorgeous and in a perfect location, but it’s also had only a handful of owners, who obviously have all loved living here.

The kitchen has Brazilian Bahia Azul granite throughout and a coffered ceiling.

Of course, the estate has been sensitively updated and renovated over the years, and in this resort-style setting, it’s a perfect escape without leaving home.

You may have my permission to fill it with white furniture, but for the love of all things architectural, do not splash white paint over that gorgeous woodwork. This house deserves an owner that appreciates what is here. One that loves history, architecture, and entertaining because if ever there were a home destined for great entertaining, this is it.  

Spanish Revival
Spanish Revival
The home lives and looks like a five-star resort.

Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s Faisal Halum has this Spanish Revival estate at 4201 Armstrong Parkway offered at $15.75 million. It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to own an architectural masterpiece.


Note to readers: You may have seen this house featured in other media outlets with a different architect named. Thompson and Swain are indeed the architects of record.  



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.

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