Save Perry Heights

Home of first Perry Heights resident, Mr. and Mrs. Milburn Hobson after being model home for summer campaign.

“Fighting for your neighborhood is just a part of living in this area of town,” said Wendell Patterson, incoming president of the Perry Heights Association, an Oaklawn neighborhood interested in the proposed ordinance. “If you don’t fight, you’ll wake up some morning and find you’re being bulldozed.” February 10, 1986

The proposed ordinance he was discussing would allow areas that have significant architectural or cultural attributes to become conservation districts. They would be similar to historical districts, yet not need to be as old or stately, and the restrictions on owners’ rights on what they can do with their homes would be much less rigid. Rawlins Street eventually became a conservation district that would help protect the street from future development. 

There have been several times Perry Heights had to fight. Here is a quick timeline of some of the events when our Perry Heights Neighborhood Association was essential in giving us a voice. 

1975– Perry Heights neighbors get three street closure barriers to traffic approved and installed. The traffic cutting through our neighborhood was so bad during the construction of the Wycliff/ Douglas split construction to the tollway entrance that neighbors had trouble crossing the street in their neighborhood. After the barriers, the traffic was cut to a quarter of what it was. 

1985 – Keeping Craddock Park Intact.  A developer wanted to create an extensive mixed-use project that included building a tollbooth and a northbound entrance to the tollway using more of Craddock Park.  The neighborhood had to hire an attorney to prevent this from happening and eventually the project was defeated.  Key and Cay Kolb along with many others in the neighborhood are credited with protecting our neighborhood and the park. 

1987-91 – The same developer who was defeated foreclosed on the buildings in the planned block creating a slum that was described as a war zone, Beirut, and a drug-infested eyesore just over the tollway from Perry Heights at 4500 Cedar Springs. prostitution was also so common that the city was considering posting the names of the “johns” arrested each week. 

2001– A serial arsonist had set several fires in and around Perry Heights before spreading to East Dallas. The arsonist was eventually caught and prosecuted. 

2001– Perry Heights Neighborhood Association and the Oaklawn Committee defeat tearing down what was described as the last historic block in Oak Lawn along Rawlins for a townhouse complex.  The defeat was only temporary. The city eventually allowed developers to take pieces of the block and built a few different townhouse complexes. 

2012– Developers started an apartment project on Wycliff and Cedar Springs. The developer worked with the Oaklawn committee as well as the Perry Heights Neighborhood Association to come to some concessions on heights, access, and parking. Nancy and Howard Weinberger were essential in representing our neighborhood’s concerns to a better outcome. 

As Mr. Patterson told us, there are bound to be challenging times in our neighborhood’s future. It is so important to stay involved and know our neighbors.  Perry Heights is a rare, 100-year-old idea of a beautiful urban neighborhood and it will take us all to protect it and nurture it so future families can enjoy it.  Please be involved in the board, committees, and events in the coming year to build a more vital Perry Heights. Make an effort to meet your neighbors and talk about how unique this lovely six-block retreat is to us. 

Gone, but not forgotten

The house was built in 1924 and almost made its 100th birthday. The house will be demolished due to fire and structural damage over the last few years and a new chapter at that address will begin. Luckily, current Perry Heights residents have purchased the lot and will be rebuilding in 2023.

However, for close to 70 years, the house was home to the Chantly’s who are best known as the owners of one of Dallas’ favorite seafood restaurants of the 1950’s and 1960’s on Lemmon Ave.

James Nicholas Chantly, the son of Nicholaos and Maria Tsantili of Terpsithea, Nafpaktos, Greece immigrated to the U.S. in 1909 when he was 17 and lived in Fort Worth, Texas with distant relatives. He worked hard and learned the restaurant business and planned to open his own restaurant. He returned to Greece to meet Vassiliki Panayotou of Patras, Greece (close to his hometown) and eventually married his young wife in Athens in 1945 and took her back to Texas. They opened Chantly’s Seafood on Lemmon Ave at Throckmorton in Dallas (where Taco Cabana stands today) which served mostly fried seafood. The restaurant was packed especially on Friday nights with patrons vying for a table. James and Vassiliki raised a family of two boys (Christos and Nicholas) and two girls (Maria and Pauline) in Perry Heights. The Chantlys were also involved members of the Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church. The children went to T.J. Rusk and North Dallas High School with Chris on the football team and Maria on the Vikingetts drill team. The family lived in the Perry Heights home from the 1950s through 2022 when it was sold.

James bought the land and ran the restaurant from the late 1940s through the 1960’s. The restaurant had a huge second floor used for parties and groups where several special occasions in Dallas took place. James passed away in 1976 at 84 and his wife passed away in 1994 at age 85. In the years following, two of the three remaining children who inherited the home resided there. They died in 2019 and 2021, leaving only one surviving daughter who lived elsewhere in Texas to sell the home. The land where the original restaurant sat, is now a Taco Cabana and is still owned by the family.

The Perry Estate

The first photographed meeting of the Perry Heights neighbors

The Perry Estate facing Craddock Park

This photo was taken in the dining room of the neighborhood founder and resident, Gordon Perry Estate with what is believed to be the neighbors at the time. The second photo is colorized to show details of the subjects and the room.

The Perrys sold the big home and briefly lived in the house at 4327 Rawlins before moving to San Angelo. The estate has since been demolished in the 1960’s and now is the site of townhouse condominiums.

Thank you to Gordon Perry III for the family photos.

The Opera Stars in the Kitchen

3327 Prescott as it looks today

If you were lucky enough to get an invitation, your senses would be overwhelmed with garlic, lemons, and sweet oregano while listening to the chic couple talk about their adventures living all over Europe, singing in the most beautiful opera houses, and probably tennis. Plato and Dorothy Karayanis loved to entertain in their condominium at 3327 Prescott in Park Place. He came to Dallas hired by the Dallas Opera as the General Director to save it in 1977. The Opera company was at a low point financially and needed some new ideas to survive. Plato was able to increase donations tenfold and take the budget from $1.29 million for 12 performances of four operas to a budget of $9.5 million for 21 performances of five operas achieving record ticket sales with one of the highest subscription audiences in the country.

Plato was born in Pittsburg, PA. His parents were immigrants from Cyprus and Mytilene (Lesbos) and married and settled in Pittsburg. Plato was brought up bilingual and his mother made sure he knew how to cook the Greek classics. After seeing his first opera, La Boheme in high school, Plato became a member of the Pittsburg Civic Light Opera upon graduation and began training for a life in Opera. He worked his way through college studying voice and opera. One of his scholarships was to the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia where while learning stage directing, he met the love of his life, Dorothy Krebill.

Dorothy was a mezzo-soprano and soon after she married Plato in 1956, they went to Europe for eight years performing in opera houses in Germany and Switzerland. Dorothy and Plato then moved to San Fransico in 1964 where Plato started his management career. They joined the Metropolitan Opera National Company in 1965 where she was a leading mezzo-soprano and he was an assistant stage director and administrative assistant. Plato joined Affiliate Artists, Inc in 1967 before becoming the General Director for the fledging Dallas Opera in 1977 and staying 23 years to build it into a stunning success.

Plato and Dorothy

Neighbors knew Plato by his bright orange BMW pulling into the complex and often washing and polishing that car on weekends. He loved tennis and regularly had tennis workouts until he was 89. He loved classical music, jazz, and hand-tailored suits. Dorothy was often compared to Mary Tyler Moore because of her beauty and her bright, dazzling smile. She loved to cook, entertain her friends, and of course, opera. Both Dorothy and Plato were also involved, neighborhood activists in Perry Heights, and often had their neighbors over for those delicious Greek feasts they both would prepare.

Plato retired in 2000, and the couple moved to Sante Fe, NM, and was active in the opera company and other arts groups there for years. Plato passed away in April of 2022 due to cancer complications and was survived by his wife of 65 years, Dorothy. The couple was known for their gracious hospitality and outgoing spirit. We should all be so lucky to have a couple like the Karayanis as neighbors, however, they give all of Dallas the gift of a world-class opera company.

Better Together: Perry Heights and Our Heroes

This drawing was a gift to Perry Heights’ neighbors commissioned by Harry S. Parker, a past 13-year resident of the Plantation Style home at Hawthorne and Rawlins. It depicts the neighborhood’s activism against greedy developers. Mr. Parker was the Director of the Dallas Museum of Art.

Over the years, the lush, peaceful Perry Heights neighborhood we see today has seen plenty of challenges. As the neighborhood turns 100, it’s good to look back at some of the challenges our neighborhood has faced over the years.

From the beginning of our neighborhood in the Roaring ’20s to today, we are celebrating what our founder, Gordon Perry, dreamed of: a well-built, brick neighborhood that attracts people from every stage of life and various economic backgrounds into a true urban dream neighborhood where we can enjoy attractive tree-lined streets, gardens, and friendly neighbors. Without air conditioning, the original homes had sleeping porches to use in the summer to catch a breeze. This was the inspiration for the Perry Heights advertising slogan, “Cool at Nights.”

The ’40s, ’50s, and ’60s were a time of togetherness and community, with neighbors giving each other wedding showers, holding weddings in their homes, sending men to fight in WWII, and caring for war widows. After the war, a surge of children in the neighborhood would constantly be playing in front yards and in the park. But as we know, every neighborhood has cycles.

The late ’60s and ’70s were a difficult period for Perry Heights and the Oak Lawn neighborhood. As in the rest of the country, white flight and panic over integrated schools drove families into the nearby suburbs. Areas in and around Oak Lawn became less desirable. Many of the homes in the neighborhood turned into rentals and their tidy appearance began to suffer. Counterculture types such as hippies and artists, attracted to the low rents, began to move into the area. The decline in value also attracted developers who wanted to buy up lots, demolish homes, and build more dense apartment buildings. About this time developers purchased the old Perry Estate and eventually tore it down and built Park Place condominiums in 1968. Developers demolished most of the homes around Perry Heights along Lemmon and Cedar Springs by the mid-1970s and built apartment buildings, retail strip centers, and fast food businesses. The Wycliff-Douglas couplet that was created to connect the Dallas North Tollway to U.S. 75 (Central Expressway) had already claimed 30 homes in Oak Lawn that had to be demolished for the project. The increase in density also brought crime, traffic, homelessness, and prostitution into the neighborhood streets.

In the 1970s, the neighborhood faced a new challenge. An absentee owner had inherited his parent’s home in the 4400 block of Vandelia. He was offered significant rental income to turn the home into a group home or halfway house. Because our neighborhood is zoned for single-family use, the neighbors hired an attorney and fought successfully to keep this type of housing category out of the neighborhood.

It was around this time that a group of Perry Heights neighbors also realized that they needed to do something to protect what was left of Perry Heights and preserve the peaceful, quiet community they knew. They banded together and, in a two-year struggle, were able to convince the city to close off vehicular traffic with curbed diverters at three intersections: Herschel and Lemmon, Herschel and Cedar Springs, and Prescott and Lemmon. Not everyone in Perry Heights was in favor of the closures, but 90% were, according to the petition. The closures reduced cross-traffic by an estimated 6,000-8,000 cars per day and helped unite the neighborhood. A block party with entertainment by the Paul Guerro Orchestra celebrated the achievement. Thus, 1974 saw the beginnings of what would become the Perry Heights Neighborhood Association.

Neighbors had other concerns including the noise from Love Field airport. Oak Lawn Residents began what was called the Oak Lawn Preservation Society in 1973 to fight some of these local problems. The founder and many of the members were also Perry Heights residents.

In 1985, the neighborhood thwarted an attempt by a developer to take additional land from Craddock Park to create a northbound entrance to the Dallas North Tollway and build a large-scale rental development between Lemmon and Cedar Springs. The Springs project was defeated by the neighborhood opposition. The Springs was developed, but in a much more pared-down form and without the tollway entrance ramp or the retail plan.

In 1985, the neighborhood formed the Perry Heights Neighborhood Association (PHNA) making everyone who owns a home in Perry Heights an automatic member of the association.

By 1991, absentee apartment building owners and the real estate crash left buildings and construction projects surrounding Perry Heights abandoned. This created more serious urban problems such as drug houses, prostitution, and increased homelessness. The city didn’t have the money to raze the two dozen buildings on 17 acres beginning with 4500 Cedar Springs Road that, according to news articles, was referred to as Beruit, because the area looked like the bombed-out remnants of war. It would take another decade for the area to be rebuilt.

It was during this time that PHNA began working with the city and had fundraisers such as neighborhood sales and other events to build the walls at the blocked intersections. The intent was to stop the flow of pedestrians from Cedar Springs and Lemmon by way of Prescott and Herschel. This goal was finally achieved in 1995 when the city conditionally deeded the dead-end streets to the Association. The conditions include keeping the Association active, maintaining the walls and streets, paying property taxes, and carrying liability insurance. Much appreciation goes to David Wagner and John Mahoney for making certain many of these conditions have continued through the years with the voluntary contributions from the neighborhood residents.

By the 1990’s, Oak Lawn had become a destination for the GLBTQ population in Dallas. Many whom had been renters were now purchasing homes in Perry Heights and renovating them. This new gay wave in the area was not without some controversy. So many gays and lesbians were moving to Perry Heights that it was often referred to as Fairy Heights.

With the increase in renovations in the neighborhood, some residents began pushing for a Conservation District to preserve the look and feel of the neighborhood. Although noble in theory, some homeowners did not want a committee restricting what they could build or how their homes should look. The Association experienced its first “civil war.” Ironically, the same owner that wanted the group home on Vandelia, demolished that house and began building a house that many felt did not share the same character of the neighborhood. During the quarrels and calls for code enforcement, a group of Rawlins residents splintered off and established a Rawlins-only Conservation District in 2007. This left some neighbors feeling abandoned and bitter.

There was a call for significant change to the PHNA bylaws at that time. The change in articles of the Association’s updated bylaws was to be more equal in the representation of the entire neighborhood and more transparent and inclusive. Current resident, Howard Weinberger, along with David Ellis, Weston Woods, and Mike Sawicki were the architects of the updated bylaws. Since the unification of our Board, the Association has successfully worked with the developer of a townhouse project at the edge of Perry Heights at Wycliff and Vandelia and the apartment building on Wycliff and Cedar Springs to alter the plans to be less impactful to our neighborhood. Many Perry Heights residents are also members of the Oak Lawn Committee, which is designed to protect the Planned Development District 193 district (est 1985) and work with developers requesting variances on projects in Oak Lawn. This district stretching from downtown to Inwood has different zoning and building restrictions than other districts within Dallas. The neighborhood around us has become more gentrified and this has lulled many in the neighborhood into a false sense of security and, unfortunately, apathy. This is troubling as there is a significant uptick in development in the last few years.

We have recently elected a new Perry Heights Neighborhood Association board. They will serve an important role in protecting and preserving Perry Heights for generations to come.

While it’s impossible to note every neighbor who fought to protect Perry Heights over the decades, there are numerous past neighbors whose names, initiative, and leadership should not be forgotten:

Celeste and Paul Guerro, Ann & Bill Gilliland, Brian Hayes, Plato and Dorothy Karayanis, Cay and Key Kolb, Howard Okon, Harry S. Parker, Patsy and Arch Swank, Patricia Evans, and Stephen Rosenthal .

There are also many neighbors that are still in Perry Heights and continue to fight for our neighborhood.

We owe each of them our thanks and our appreciation for being active and taking their time, concern, and resources to preserve our unique neighborhood.

Marvelously Modern in a 1930’s bungalow

Austin, Chris, Parker, and Bentley ( photography by William Bichara Photography)

Austin and Chris moved into their 1931 bungalow on Vandelia in 2020 and have already transformed the house into a stylish home. The house reflects the young couple’s fresh sense of style. It’s also a testament to how to retain the charm of the past while still accommodating modern needs.

As soon as they saw the white cottage and opened the door to the expansive living area and then caught a glimpse of the backyard pool, they were hooked on this house. The pool needed work with its old coping and cracked concrete and the largest bedroom was still tiny without access to a bath, but they knew the bones were there. They made the changes to the primary bedroom, borrowing spaces and creating a fabulous owner’s suite with a walkout onto the pool deck. They then took a while to decide on the main color of the home, which would be painted everywhere for cohesion. (They finally decided on Ibis White by Sherwin Williams, by the way) The decorating began at that point. All whites and creamy neutrals give the interiors a California coastal look, especially with the light wood flooring.

The couple loves to gather around the fireplace in the colder months and watch television on the sectional and then spend most of the warmer months around the pool and outdoor decks, entertaining.

Chris enjoys pairing up high and low-end items to give the home a relaxed and lived-in vibe. Not only the placement of items, but the fragrance is important to him as well. You will find perfectly placed, luxury candles in every room. There is a front den off the living room where you can entertain a few friends and see the neighbors walk by. The guest house is a favorite of anyone visiting since it shows a sense of fun and you almost expect to look out the window and see the waves come softly up the sand. Of course what you do see is a chic, perfectly arranged pool with loungers, a table shaded by a pergola, usually set for an alfresco meal.

The bedrooms carry an airy, casual vibe throughout the house.

The office, although lovely, is the next to get a makeover into more of a sophisticated gentlemen’s lounge where you could choose from collected bourbons and have conversations. The house is perfectly dreamy and perfect for this busy, professional couple.

The Collector

The 1923 built house at 4415 Vandelia as it looks today after an expansion and renovation.

Edgar Lee Smith moved into the house at 4415 Vandelia with his mother, Ethel Smith, in 1955 when he was 28 years old. He had just received his MA from the University of Texas after graduating from SMU with his BA. Before he could obtain a higher education, he served in the Navy during World War II. The family had just lost their father, Ray V. Smith, and moved out of the family home at 1820 North Pearl St., now the site of the Myerson Symphony Theater. Ray was a shipping manager for Western Union Paper in downtown Dallas. The family had already lost their other son, Ray Jr., who was two years older than Edgar, in France during WWII.

Edgar in his latter years in his home filled with Antiques
Article reporting on first Gay Rights March in Dallas demanding Equal Rights

Edgar’s mother had some medical issues and Edgar always made his mother his first priority since it was just down to the two of them. Ethel was very involved in the Gold Star Mother’s Organization and became the Dallas Chapter President. They both enjoyed searching for antiques and spent their days looking for the perfect additions to their collections. Edgar also had a passion for bromeliad plants and began collecting several varieties along with orchids. Edgar would persuade his friends to go on road trips just over the border in Mexico so he could find new plants to add to his collection. After several years, he formed the Dallas-Ft. Worth Bromeliad Society served as President and then was voted into the International Society, serving as Director, Vice President, and President between 1974 and 1987. He also enjoyed hybridizing bromeliads and served as a judge in regional shows into the 1990s. Bromeliads encompass over 3,000 different species, the pineapple being the most recognized.

His friend, Jim Apkin, recalls that Edgar was a bit of a loner, and wasn’t much of a drinker or barhopper, however, he loved going to the movies. Edgar most likely avoided bars in the 1950s and 1960s known to be requested by gay men for fear of being raided, beaten, and outed. Edgar also enjoyed going to parties with his friends who appreciated his very dry sense of humor. He enjoyed being a member of the leather community of Dallas, which at the time was very underground, gathering in private residences and using speakeasy codewords to enter parties. He and his friends were very involved politically in Dallas and fought for better treatment of gays by the city and the police. At that time in the 1960s and 1970s, it was still against the law in conservative Dallas for gay men to drink, dance, dress in non-gender-conforming clothes, and kiss in public. Police raids were carried out frequently to suppress attendance in what was known to be gay establishments. Being arrested meant having your name listed in the crime section of the newspaper and being fired from your job or being turned out by your family.

After his mother passed away, he lived with his collection of antiques and his plants in the Vandelia house. He drove well into his 80s and all of the neighbors knew him by his large green 1970 Chevrolet Impala sedan. Because voting for the candidate that has the best interests of the community is so important, he was at the Oaklawn Library volunteering as an election worker for every election. Several neighbors on Vandelia routinely checked in on him and helped him when needed. When he died in 2014, his collections were actioned off and his house was sold. The house still has the front facade that it did when Edgar lived there and the small oak tree twigs he planted when he first moved there in 1955 are huge and still strain for more room in the parkway in front of the house.

Perry Heights Home of Oak Lawn Pioneer

4322 N. Hall as it looks today

Llora Cullum Pierce moved into this home at 4322 Hall Street in 1924 when she was 59, with her three children after her husband died after two years of ill health in 1923. Her husband was Rev. John Foster Pierce who taught at Southern Methodist University since 1920 after preaching all across Texas in various churches. He first became an attorney and then decided that being a Methodist reverend was his calling. For the last two years, he served as a junior paster at Oak Lawn Methodist during his illness.

Llora was the oldest surviving Cullum pioneer who came with her parents and her eight other siblings from their Civil war destroyed Plantation in Tipton County, Tennessee by stagecoach, boat, and then train to Dallas and settled on ten acres of Oak Lawn in the land just north of Turtle Creek all the way up to where Oak Lawn Ave is today. The Cullums also built several homes in that area close to the church for their growing families. Llora’s father was Marcus Hirum Cullum, who was the founder of the Oak Lawn United Methodist Church. Rev. Cullum started to hold services in 1872, outside under a huge oak tree at the current site, which gave the church and later, the area its name. The men of the church, armed with saws and hammers, erected the frame church building on the site. Pastor Cullum named the church Oak Lawn United Methodist. After 15 years, the brick sanctuary was built that still is standing today. All of the Cullum sons and daughters served the church with devotion, even after their father’s death. In addition, Llora’s brother, A.W. Cullum started a grocery store that became a regional grocery chain with the name Tom Thumb.

Llora’s son, George F Pierce, became the president of his Uncle Thomas M’s sporting goods store named Cullum & Boren. Her other son became a manufacturing agent in Dallas, and her only daughter, Ella Katherine married J. H. Webb in the Pierce’s Hall home and then moved to Rochester, NY. Llora’s neighbor, J.B. Rucker, hosted a supper reception for their wedding at their home at 4409 Rawlins on the night preceding the wedding. Llora was very active in her father’s church throughout her life serving as a Sunday school teacher and in the women’s club. She was a member of the Shakespeare Followers Club and had several events and receptions at her home. Llora later moved elsewhere in Dallas and lived until she was 90 years old and had her funeral in the church her father founded. She left eight grandchildren and 15 great children when she died in 1956.

The Flamenco Genius on Vandelia Street

4315 Vandelia St as it looks today

Eddie Freeman was a noted English jazz musician of the first half of the 20th century (1909-1957) and a transcriber and teacher of flamenco music in the latter half (1957- 1987) while living in Perry Heights in Dallas. Edward J. Freeman was born in London and ran away from home at 14 and survived by playing the violin in pit orchestras of silent movie houses in England. While playing in movie houses he took up the tenor banjo. To better master that instrument, he traveled to the United States, where he played with Ricardo Giannoni in New York, with a dance orchestra in Baltimore at the Summit Roadhouse near the Pimlico Racetrack, in a Harlem speakeasy; and in engagements with Billy Lustig and the Scranton Sirens. While convalescing from an illness in Baltimore, he developed a method for adapting the tenor banjo techniques to the guitar, which later led to his development of a four-string tenor guitar, the Eddie Freeman Special, using his new method.

He returned to London to play in the Harry Roy Orchestra at the London Pavilion. When noted bandleader Al Collins, heard of Freeman and listened to him play, Collins signed him up for his orchestra at the Savoy Hotel in London. When Collins switched to the Berkeley Hotel in 1932, Freeman went with him.

In the early 1930s, Freeman designed the “Eddie Freeman Special 4-String Guitar” for Selmer Music Company, to implement the guitar method he had developed in Baltimore. One of the Selmer-Maccaferri guitars, the Eddie Freeman Special had the scale-length and body size of a standard guitar and used a reentrant CGDA tuning, that had a better sound for rhythm guitar than the normal tenor guitar with its very high A. Since it was still tuned CGDA, it could be played by tenor banjoists. Selmer-Maccaferri tenor guitars were produced from 1932 until 1934. Nearly 100 of the some 300 genuine Maccaferri guitars that were built were Eddie Freeman Specials

Freeman spent the war years in Belfast, Ireland playing trumpet and conducting a seven-piece Dixie combo in The Embassy Club. He met his future wife, named Maureen Mckeown there as a young girl. After the war, he played trumpet in the Knightsbridge South American Club in London and doubled with a jazz guitar in the Bag O’Nails Club.

Freeman moved to the Bronx in New York in the mid-1940s and after returning to Belfast to marry Maureen. They settled in the Bronx and had two children, Gerard and Anne. By the early 1950s, they had moved to Oceanside, California where he supported himself as a piano tuner and repairman because he couldn’t work as a musician without a work visa. Inspired by flamenco music, which he first heard at the Savoy Hotel, he left his family in California and traveled to Spain to discover its fundamentals. His search was interrupted when he played violin in the Palma de Majorca Symphony, but in Palma, he met guitarist Manolo Baron from whom he learned the basics of flamenco. He somehow broke through to the Flamenco masters who were mostly gypsy masters and were resistant to allow an Englishman to learn their folk art. He then spent 18 months translating the greatest Flamenco music into sheet music which had never been done before. He later formed a flamenco group, Los Tres de Sevilla, with two dancers.

Freeman also developed a system for teaching Flamenco guitar that differed dramatically from the traditional method in which the student learns by watching the teacher’s fingerboard and copying what he is doing. Instead, Freeman insisted that his students learn to read standard music notation, and devised a very simple approach for teaching reading and basic music theory starting with the first lesson in a carefully graded sequence of familiar classical pieces and the Flamenco solos that he had transcribed. Each piece in the library of music that formed the basis of his system was carefully selected to develop a particular aspect of technique or understanding of Flamenco in a logical progression. He has trained several Flamenco guitarists over the years.

Eddie Freeman and his family first lived in the house at 4303 Cedar Springs in 1957 when the road was a two-lane street. He made the interior of the house his own by putting up wood panels with burlap as wall cloth and made his own furniture including a dining table that can be converted into a pool table where he liked to entertain his visiting flamenco artists as they passed through town. The family then moved to 4315 Vandelia a few years later and remained there through the 1960s and 1970s. They had two miniature schnauzers and enjoyed entertaining friends, students, and neighbors.

His wife, Maureen, has been described as a delightful person with a beautiful Irish wit and sense of humor. She was a lively petite lady who would always offer tea and was a great storyteller and conversationalist. She loved talking about improvements she was making to the house and the yard. His son, Gerald became a vice president for a company in Minnesota, and his daughter, Anne graduated from UT with a doctorate in English. She was also an accomplished pianist. She taught English for years at St. Mark’s School and later at Ursuline Academy in Dallas. Eddie died in 1987 at age 78. His daughter Anne died at age 60 in 1994.

A drawing of the master, Eddie Freeman

Edward Gordon Perry, Sr.

E. Gordon Perry, Sr.

Edward Gordon Perry grew up in a little town called Woodville, Tennessee, about two hours east of Memphis.  As a young man in 1908, he moved to El Paso and was the first businessman in El Paso to begin selling Fords in 1912 (the model T type) along with his brother-in-law.  Three years later he began selling the first Dodges in Texas with General Pershing’s army and Pancho Villa among his clients. He then moved his family to Dallas and opened a Dodge dealership, eventually having a showroom at Pacific and Pearl, downtown. The dealership, Perry Motors Company, became the 2nd largest Dodge distributor in the country.  The new dealership was the most complete dealership in the South since it provided a showroom as well as service and would allow trade-ins to upgrade your Dodge.

He also developed Perry Heights as a unique neighborhood in 1922. He created a realty company with investors and purchased the land. As a part of the deal, the seller donated a portion of the land to the city as a city park running across most of the development. Craddock Park was the first privately donated park in Dallas. He had Fooshee and Cheek, architects layout the plats to provide wide streets with no overheard wires and alleyways to keep the neighborhood attractive, with several trees to provide a canopy of green. He wanted the neighborhood to be diverse in the sizes of the homes, yet restricted the building materials to brick, stone, tile, and stucco with no wooden or frame homes allowed.  Rawlins owners needed to spend at least $10,000 on their homes, which needed to be two-story dwellings, Hall owners needed to spend at least $6,000 on their new home, and Vandelia owners needed to spend at least $5,000 on their home according to the abstract of the development dated August of 1922. 

Edward G. Perry, Sr. ‘s wife was Melvina Vandelia Kirkpatrick Perry from Ripley, Tennessee. They married in 1910. They had two children, Vandelia, a daughter and Edward Gordon Perry Jr., a son. Vandelia, a debutante, and Edward both attended SMU. Edward Gordon Perry Jr. because a successful inventor and businessman who served as the chief research engineer for Texas Instruments. He was also a co-founder of Recognition Equipment, Inc, (REI). He is best known for inventing the first commercially viable Retina Character Reader For more information on his life, please see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Gordon_Perry_Jr.

Perry was trying to create a neighborhood for people in various life stages and economic brackets for a more diverse neighborhood. Mr. Perry Sr. believed that homeownership created strong communities within cities. He also built his family home in the center of the neighborhood and built a large playground for his children and encouraged the neighborhood children to play there as well.  He named one of the newly created streets after his wife’s middle name and his daughter’s first name, Vandelia. His home was said to cost $75,000 and included a pool and tennis court and was just across Hawthorne from the park where the Park Place townhomes are now. 

In addition to Perry Heights, he was very involved in the YMCA of Dallas. He was the director from 1922 to 1947 and raised one million dollars from other business owners to open three branches of the Dallas YMCA in 1928. He was also chairman of the social welfare Association committee on inter-organization cooperation that worked with Dallas businesses in providing opportunities and funds for those less fortunate. 

Perry was also the superintendent of the First Methodist Church School for 16 years and a member of the board for SMU for 15 years.  Perry was also the president of the USO for two years during WW II and was active in other civic and church activities. He is quoted as saying “I have had a lot of privileges in my life and I feel very humble about it.” He felt that service to his community was of utmost importance. 

He and his wife moved to San Angelo in 1947 to be close to his grandchildren and died in 1952 just shy of his 66th birthday.