Handley (Fort Worth)

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Handley was established in North Texas in 1884 by retired Confederate Major James Madison Handley of Georgia. He settled on land which he created as a plantation just seven miles from the center of Fort Worth.

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[edit] Brief history

When Major Handley arrived he settled on land that was included in the Sara Gray Jennings Survey of 1856 and a very small community began to grow around him to the west. According to the Fort Worth Gazette newspaper of 1888, the most that could be said for the area was that it was good for hunting foxes. By 1901 Handley had 12 houses and 80 residents.

Handley as a town began to grow when the Northern Texas Traction Company bought land in the southern part of the community where it developed a holiday resort called Lake Erie. The company developed its lake and added a roller skate rink, a dance hall, restaurant and rides on a pier above the water.

[edit] Interurban

In 1902 the Northern Texas Traction Company linked the city of Dallas to the east and the city of Fort Worth to the west with its own electric interurban streetcar line. In 1905 the street cars were moving at 8 mph, but by 1923 the speed had picked up to 65 mph.

[edit] Annexed by Fort Worth

In 1946 the city of Fort Worth annexed Handley as a community and its independence came to an end. In that year it had 510 school students and a total population of around 1,000. Fort Worth had a population of well over 100,000 residents.

[edit] Today

After years of neglect a small neighborhood association has now revived a retro-historic version of Handley. Its once famous Lake Erie is no more having been absorbed by the northern part of Lake Arlington, the street cars and their rail lines disappeared long ago and the Traction company power station is now operated by Exelon Power.

Its one and two story frame homes are engulfed in trees that populate the neighborhood formed by Meadowbrook Drive to the north, Hitson Lane to the east, Lancaster Avenue to the south and Loop 820 to the west.

[edit] See also