Hit the Road – Self Guided Driving Tour
Transcription
Hit the Road – Self Guided Driving Tour
Make U-turn, follow route back to Hildebrand and Broadway. Turn right on Hildebrand, continue over 281 until McCullough (see inset). 25 24 23 22 21 26 20 Hit the Road – Self Guided Driving Tour San Antonio’s Commercial Corridors 18 19 Prior to the 1930’s, the majority of main roads leading out of downtown San Antonio were lined with a mix of residential and commercial buildings. That all changed in 1938, when city council approved the zoning of all those arterial streets as wholly commercial corridors. Development quickly spread along Castroville Road, Fredericksburg Road, Laredo Highway and San Pedro Avenue, among many others. Broadway and the Austin Highway 18 Broadway and Patterson Avenue – Bus Shelter Charles Baumberger, the founder of the Alamo Portland Cement Company, originally commissioned this trabajo rustico structure as a streetcar stop for the city of Alamo Heights in the 1920s. Craftsman Dionicio Rodriguez created the palapa-style shelter out of concrete sculpted to look like tree trunks supporting a thatched roof. The structure, which now functions as a bus shelter, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004. 19 4940 Broadway – Broadway Theater When this dramatic Art Moderne theater opened in 1939, it featured the latest in streamlined design that characterized the Intestate suburban theater chain. In addition to modern architecture and bold neon, the theater boasted a 75-ton air conditioning system to attract patrons and keep them cool. The theater continued to operate through 1981. 20 5146– 5150 Broadway – Stewart Center This shopping center was built c. 1940 and originally housed a Winn’s Five and Ten (now Gabriel’s Liquor), a post office (now Lion & Rose Pub), and Patt’s Drug Store (now UPS). H.C. “Pat” Patterson opened his pharmacy at 5150 Broadway in1941. The pharmacy featured a soda fountain, which initially offered carhop service. Patt’s became a neighborhood institution, operating out of the Stewart Center until 2000, when it moved to a new Broadway location. 21 5424 Broadway – Pegasus Sign Dallas-based Magnolia Oil (now Mobil) hired the local architectural firm of Adams and Adams to design this Spanish eclectic gas station. This neon-lit, flying red horse first soared over the service station at the corner of Broadway and Austin Highway in 1934. When Mobil Oil sold the station in 1985, the Conservation Society worked successfully with the oil company and the new owner to secure the future of the distinctive Pegasus sign. The 1986 agreement reached with Mobil Corporation represented the first of its kind because it allowed the company’s trademark to be on permanent loan to a private entity: the Society's Foundation. 22 416 Austin Highway – Spacetone Music A more recent roadside building, it started out as Jif-e-Mart #677 in 1973. This unique canopy structure has gone through numerous uses and name changes ever since. By 1976 it had become Green Things Nursery, followed by a liquor store, and then Five Broads Off Broadway antique store. 23 1032 Austin Highway – Steele Motel LOST In 1937, O. V. Steele purchased the land to build a motor court on the lucrative Austin Highway. The twenty-one unit Steele Motel featured stucco buildings, as stipulated by the deed restrictions, and a pool. Although Steele sold the property in 1941, the motel retained his name. Until 1951, this property lay outside the San Antonio city limits. 24 1150 Austin Highway – Bun-NBarrel This roadside drive-in, topped by a one-ton, concrete barrel sign, opened in 1950 and became known for its BBQ. President Lyndon Baines Johnson supposedly even sent the secret service over to pick up an order for him, whenever he visited San Antonio. Until the 1970s, customers received their root beer in chilled glass mugs. 25 1201 Austin Highway – Earl Abel's Sign The neon signage from the original Earl Abel's restaurant on the corner of Broadway and Hildebrand was salvaged and moved in 2006, prior to the original building's demolition. Fourfoot red letters spell out “Earl Abel's,” while “Coffee Shop” and “Restaurant” appear in blue. The seventeen-foot, kidney-shaped marquee still proclaims, “This is Earl Abel's Restaurant,” with a yellow arrow pointing the way. 26 Broadway, within the city limits of San Antonio, and Austin Highway, historically outside the city limits to the north, functioned as the main auto route between San Antonio and Austin in the years before the Interstate Highway System. These two roads not only served many of the day-to-day needs of local San Antonians, but also those of travelers and tourists to the Alamo City. The area just north of downtown became known as “Automobile Row,” with numerous auto showrooms, while motor courts and early motels sprung up along Austin Highway. In between, the former streetcar suburb of Alamo Heights developed with the slightly different feel of a small town main street, complete with a movie theater and small-scale shopping centers. 3902 McCullough – Olmos Bharmacy L.D. Gilmore opened Gilmore's Pharmacy in this building in 1938. The pharmacy, which also featured a soda fountain, became a popular place to meet over a milkshake. The name changed to “Olmos Pharmacy” in 1950, but the lettering on the clock above the entrance proclaimed, “Olomos.” To the rear, in 1948 a HEB grocery store was constructed, complete with pylon sign, a relatively new feature introduced to help attract the attention of a society speeding by in their automobiles. Many thanks to the generous support of our sponsors: Charlott’s Antiques, City of San Antonio District 1 Councilmember Diego Bernal, City of San Antonio Office of Cultural Affairs, City of San Antonio Office of Historic Preservation, Downtown Alliance San Antonio, El Tropicano Riverwalk Hotel, Grafxcowgirl Design, Jim’s Restaurants, Magic Lantern Castle Museum, MidTexMod, The NRP Group, Old Spanish Trail Centennial Celebration, Olmos Bharmacy, San Antonio College, Texas Historical Commission, Trinity University. 9 8 7 6 17 16 15 5 14 13 4 3 12 11 2 10 1 El Tropicano START 1 801 Broadway – Cavender Cadillac Built in 1926 as a REO Motor Car Company dealership. REO (pronounced as a single word) was founded in 1904 by Ransom E. Olds, who would later create Oldsmobile. The company produced an early version of the pickup truck, known as the Speedwagon. This building has proven more enduring than the rock band of the same name, although the original windows have been altered. 2 900 Broadway – San Antonio Overland Company This building joined the ranks of several other elegant car dealerships built along lower Broadway in 1926. By 1930, however, it was advertising itself as “San Antonio’s first used car bargain basement,” inviting customers to “walk down one flight of stairs and save.” The interior of the building, now an antiques store, featured ramps allowing cars to be driven up or down from the ground floor. 3 1100 Broadway – Southern Music The Sanderson Motor Company, an Essex and Hudson auto dealer, opened in this location in 1926. However, the building became best known as Southern Music, after the local music company moved there in 1950. Southern not only sold sheet music, but owned, published and printed over 5,000 musical titles. 4 1130 Broadway – Mitchell Motors Dodge Dealership LOST O.R. Mitchell had this Art Moderne style showroom built in 1949. To distinguish itself from the many other dealership’s on lower Broadway’s “automobile row,” the building featured a distinctive curved façade facing Broadway and a vertical pylon sign that read, “DODGE.” 5 1508 Broadway – Pig Stand #29 Pig Stand restaurants started the nation’s drivein craze in Dallas in 1921, bringing innovations such as Texas toast, onion rings, and carhops to the Alamo city in 1926. This location opened in 1931. A true survivor, it has become the last operating Pig Stand restaurant in the state. 6 2201 Broadway – ButterKrust Bakery Richter’s ButterKrust Bakery building was built in 1941 and expanded in 1948. Several generations of San Antonians have fond memories of visiting the plant as school children to watch bread being baked until production ceased in 1997. C.H. Guenther & Sons, Inc., which operates the Pioneer Flour Mill, purchased the building in 2010 with plans to renovate it as corporate headquarters with additional office space for lease. 7 2218 Broadway – Kentucky Fried Chicken The first Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise in San Antonio opened further north on Broadway in 1959 and was run by Earl Abel. This restaurant, which was one of at least seven in San Antonio at the time, was built c. 1973. Its boxy design with a steeply peaked roof, cupola, and weather vane matched an image from a Flexi-Site Building catalog for 1970s KFC franchise designs. At the time, the roof would have been painted with alternating red and white stripes, like a circus tent. 8 2222 N. Alamo at Broadway – Playland Park LOST Site of the amusement park Jimmy Johnson opened in 1942 to entertain families and soldiers stationed at Fort Sam Houston during World War II. The park took up 15 acres and included a 2,200 foot wooden roller coaster known as “The Rocket,” as well as a vintage 1917 carousel, among its forty rides and attractions. The park’s popularity kept it operating until 1980. 9 2602 Broadway – Handy Andy Grocery Store This store, built by local architects Adams and Adams in a “modernized Spanish” style, opened in 1940. At 10,000 square feet, this Handy Andy boasted the largest area of any grocery store in San Antonio. It also featured the “new fluorescent tube lighting, which is becoming so universally popular.” 10 3006 Broadway – Jack in the Box One of the first five Jack in the Box restaurants opened in San Antonio, c. 1970. Jack in the Box drive-through restaurants first came to Texas in 1963, although the franchise didn’t make it to San Antonio until 1969. Newspaper ads from the 1970s included a diagram showing customers how to use the drive through lane to place and pick up their orders. 11 3015 Broadway – Kiddie Park Kiddie Park has been touted as the nation’s oldest public park for children under twelve and is definitely one of the few surviving parks of its kind that opened before WWII. Dating back to 1925, the amusement park still features many of the original rides made by John Sterling “Pops” Fears at the San Antonio Roller Works, minus the roller coaster known as the “Little Dipper.” New owners rescued the park from decline in 2010. 12 3101 Broadway – Ranch Motel Architect Phil Shoop designed this twentyseven unit, U-shaped motor court, which was built in 1948 for Frank Daniels. Each Spanishtiled unit featured air conditioning, steam heat, and could be radio-controlled from the main office. It is one of the few local motor courts from this era still operating as a motel. 13 3303 Broadway – Intercontinental Motors Local architect O’Neil Ford and his associate, Howard Wong, designed this former auto showroom in 1963. Ford’s demolition of the exotic Spanish and Moorish-influenced home of Mexican exile and surgeon Dr. Aureliano Urrutia, which originally occupied the site, proved controversial at the time. Ford did manage to save many of the site’s large trees and skillfully situated the glass frame building among them so that they created a frame within which cars were displayed. 14 3617 Broadway – Park Motel Believed to be San Antonio's first motor court, the Park Motel had forty-two rooms, each with its own bathroom and carport, when built in 1931. The location proved popular with tourists who couldn't get a motel room downtown during HemisFair in 1968. 15 4108 Broadway – Jim's 16 4200 Broadway – Cheesy Jane's Jim’s #6 at this location replaced an earlier El Charro Restaurant in 1971. The popular regional coffee shop was founded by Jim Hasslocher, whose first venture in food service was a watermelon stand in front of Brackenridge Park in 1947. Built c. 1958 as a Humble Oil service station first operated by Floyd Baker. Humble was the largest seller of gasoline in Texas at the time and the first gasoline company to offer plastic credit cards to its customers. Cheesy Janes’ burger and malt shop opened here in 2000, using the 1950s era of the station as its theme. 17 4210 Broadway – Earl Abels’s LOST This was the site of the original Earl Abel's restaurant. Founder Earl Abel, who played organ at the Texas Theater, made a name for himself as one of the country's top theater organists in the 1920s. In 1940, Abel opened a restaurant that would become a beloved San Antonio institution, famous for fried chicken, homemade pies, and retro décor. Although the original building was torn down amidst much controversy in 2006, the restaurant, and its original neon signage, lives on at 1201 Austin Highway. 9 8 7 6 17 16 15 5 14 13 4 3 12 11 2 10 1 El Tropicano START 1 801 Broadway – Cavender Cadillac Built in 1926 as a REO Motor Car Company dealership. REO (pronounced as a single word) was founded in 1904 by Ransom E. Olds, who would later create Oldsmobile. The company produced an early version of the pickup truck, known as the Speedwagon. This building has proven more enduring than the rock band of the same name, although the original windows have been altered. 2 900 Broadway – San Antonio Overland Company This building joined the ranks of several other elegant car dealerships built along lower Broadway in 1926. By 1930, however, it was advertising itself as “San Antonio’s first used car bargain basement,” inviting customers to “walk down one flight of stairs and save.” The interior of the building, now an antiques store, featured ramps allowing cars to be driven up or down from the ground floor. 3 1100 Broadway – Southern Music The Sanderson Motor Company, an Essex and Hudson auto dealer, opened in this location in 1926. However, the building became best known as Southern Music, after the local music company moved there in 1950. Southern not only sold sheet music, but owned, published and printed over 5,000 musical titles. 4 1130 Broadway – Mitchell Motors Dodge Dealership LOST O.R. Mitchell had this Art Moderne style showroom built in 1949. To distinguish itself from the many other dealership’s on lower Broadway’s “automobile row,” the building featured a distinctive curved façade facing Broadway and a vertical pylon sign that read, “DODGE.” 5 1508 Broadway – Pig Stand #29 Pig Stand restaurants started the nation’s drivein craze in Dallas in 1921, bringing innovations such as Texas toast, onion rings, and carhops to the Alamo city in 1926. This location opened in 1931. A true survivor, it has become the last operating Pig Stand restaurant in the state. 6 2201 Broadway – ButterKrust Bakery Richter’s ButterKrust Bakery building was built in 1941 and expanded in 1948. Several generations of San Antonians have fond memories of visiting the plant as school children to watch bread being baked until production ceased in 1997. C.H. Guenther & Sons, Inc., which operates the Pioneer Flour Mill, purchased the building in 2010 with plans to renovate it as corporate headquarters with additional office space for lease. 7 2218 Broadway – Kentucky Fried Chicken The first Kentucky Fried Chicken franchise in San Antonio opened further north on Broadway in 1959 and was run by Earl Abel. This restaurant, which was one of at least seven in San Antonio at the time, was built c. 1973. Its boxy design with a steeply peaked roof, cupola, and weather vane matched an image from a Flexi-Site Building catalog for 1970s KFC franchise designs. At the time, the roof would have been painted with alternating red and white stripes, like a circus tent. 8 2222 N. Alamo at Broadway – Playland Park LOST Site of the amusement park Jimmy Johnson opened in 1942 to entertain families and soldiers stationed at Fort Sam Houston during World War II. The park took up 15 acres and included a 2,200 foot wooden roller coaster known as “The Rocket,” as well as a vintage 1917 carousel, among its forty rides and attractions. The park’s popularity kept it operating until 1980. 9 2602 Broadway – Handy Andy Grocery Store This store, built by local architects Adams and Adams in a “modernized Spanish” style, opened in 1940. At 10,000 square feet, this Handy Andy boasted the largest area of any grocery store in San Antonio. It also featured the “new fluorescent tube lighting, which is becoming so universally popular.” 10 3006 Broadway – Jack in the Box One of the first five Jack in the Box restaurants opened in San Antonio, c. 1970. Jack in the Box drive-through restaurants first came to Texas in 1963, although the franchise didn’t make it to San Antonio until 1969. Newspaper ads from the 1970s included a diagram showing customers how to use the drive through lane to place and pick up their orders. 11 3015 Broadway – Kiddie Park Kiddie Park has been touted as the nation’s oldest public park for children under twelve and is definitely one of the few surviving parks of its kind that opened before WWII. Dating back to 1925, the amusement park still features many of the original rides made by John Sterling “Pops” Fears at the San Antonio Roller Works, minus the roller coaster known as the “Little Dipper.” New owners rescued the park from decline in 2010. 12 3101 Broadway – Ranch Motel Architect Phil Shoop designed this twentyseven unit, U-shaped motor court, which was built in 1948 for Frank Daniels. Each Spanishtiled unit featured air conditioning, steam heat, and could be radio-controlled from the main office. It is one of the few local motor courts from this era still operating as a motel. 13 3303 Broadway – Intercontinental Motors Local architect O’Neil Ford and his associate, Howard Wong, designed this former auto showroom in 1963. Ford’s demolition of the exotic Spanish and Moorish-influenced home of Mexican exile and surgeon Dr. Aureliano Urrutia, which originally occupied the site, proved controversial at the time. Ford did manage to save many of the site’s large trees and skillfully situated the glass frame building among them so that they created a frame within which cars were displayed. 14 3617 Broadway – Park Motel Believed to be San Antonio's first motor court, the Park Motel had forty-two rooms, each with its own bathroom and carport, when built in 1931. The location proved popular with tourists who couldn't get a motel room downtown during HemisFair in 1968. 15 4108 Broadway – Jim's 16 4200 Broadway – Cheesy Jane's Jim’s #6 at this location replaced an earlier El Charro Restaurant in 1971. The popular regional coffee shop was founded by Jim Hasslocher, whose first venture in food service was a watermelon stand in front of Brackenridge Park in 1947. Built c. 1958 as a Humble Oil service station first operated by Floyd Baker. Humble was the largest seller of gasoline in Texas at the time and the first gasoline company to offer plastic credit cards to its customers. Cheesy Janes’ burger and malt shop opened here in 2000, using the 1950s era of the station as its theme. 17 4210 Broadway – Earl Abels’s LOST This was the site of the original Earl Abel's restaurant. Founder Earl Abel, who played organ at the Texas Theater, made a name for himself as one of the country's top theater organists in the 1920s. In 1940, Abel opened a restaurant that would become a beloved San Antonio institution, famous for fried chicken, homemade pies, and retro décor. Although the original building was torn down amidst much controversy in 2006, the restaurant, and its original neon signage, lives on at 1201 Austin Highway. Make U-turn, follow route back to Hildebrand and Broadway. Turn right on Hildebrand, continue over 281 until McCullough (see inset). 25 24 23 22 21 26 20 Hit the Road – Self Guided Driving Tour San Antonio’s Commercial Corridors 18 19 Prior to the 1930’s, the majority of main roads leading out of downtown San Antonio were lined with a mix of residential and commercial buildings. That all changed in 1938, when city council approved the zoning of all those arterial streets as wholly commercial corridors. Development quickly spread along Castroville Road, Fredericksburg Road, Laredo Highway and San Pedro Avenue, among many others. Broadway and the Austin Highway 18 Broadway and Patterson Avenue – Bus Shelter Charles Baumberger, the founder of the Alamo Portland Cement Company, originally commissioned this trabajo rustico structure as a streetcar stop for the city of Alamo Heights in the 1920s. Craftsman Dionicio Rodriguez created the palapa-style shelter out of concrete sculpted to look like tree trunks supporting a thatched roof. The structure, which now functions as a bus shelter, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004. 19 4940 Broadway – Broadway Theater When this dramatic Art Moderne theater opened in 1939, it featured the latest in streamlined design that characterized the Intestate suburban theater chain. In addition to modern architecture and bold neon, the theater boasted a 75-ton air conditioning system to attract patrons and keep them cool. The theater continued to operate through 1981. 20 5146– 5150 Broadway – Stewart Center This shopping center was built c. 1940 and originally housed a Winn’s Five and Ten (now Gabriel’s Liquor), a post office (now Lion & Rose Pub), and Patt’s Drug Store (now UPS). H.C. “Pat” Patterson opened his pharmacy at 5150 Broadway in1941. The pharmacy featured a soda fountain, which initially offered carhop service. Patt’s became a neighborhood institution, operating out of the Stewart Center until 2000, when it moved to a new Broadway location. 21 5424 Broadway – Pegasus Sign Dallas-based Magnolia Oil (now Mobil) hired the local architectural firm of Adams and Adams to design this Spanish eclectic gas station. This neon-lit, flying red horse first soared over the service station at the corner of Broadway and Austin Highway in 1934. When Mobil Oil sold the station in 1985, the Conservation Society worked successfully with the oil company and the new owner to secure the future of the distinctive Pegasus sign. The 1986 agreement reached with Mobil Corporation represented the first of its kind because it allowed the company’s trademark to be on permanent loan to a private entity: the Society's Foundation. 22 416 Austin Highway – Spacetone Music A more recent roadside building, it started out as Jif-e-Mart #677 in 1973. This unique canopy structure has gone through numerous uses and name changes ever since. By 1976 it had become Green Things Nursery, followed by a liquor store, and then Five Broads Off Broadway antique store. 23 1032 Austin Highway – Steele Motel LOST In 1937, O. V. Steele purchased the land to build a motor court on the lucrative Austin Highway. The twenty-one unit Steele Motel featured stucco buildings, as stipulated by the deed restrictions, and a pool. Although Steele sold the property in 1941, the motel retained his name. Until 1951, this property lay outside the San Antonio city limits. 24 1150 Austin Highway – Bun-NBarrel This roadside drive-in, topped by a one-ton, concrete barrel sign, opened in 1950 and became known for its BBQ. President Lyndon Baines Johnson supposedly even sent the secret service over to pick up an order for him, whenever he visited San Antonio. Until the 1970s, customers received their root beer in chilled glass mugs. 25 1201 Austin Highway – Earl Abel's Sign The neon signage from the original Earl Abel's restaurant on the corner of Broadway and Hildebrand was salvaged and moved in 2006, prior to the original building's demolition. Fourfoot red letters spell out “Earl Abel's,” while “Coffee Shop” and “Restaurant” appear in blue. The seventeen-foot, kidney-shaped marquee still proclaims, “This is Earl Abel's Restaurant,” with a yellow arrow pointing the way. 26 Broadway, within the city limits of San Antonio, and Austin Highway, historically outside the city limits to the north, functioned as the main auto route between San Antonio and Austin in the years before the Interstate Highway System. These two roads not only served many of the day-to-day needs of local San Antonians, but also those of travelers and tourists to the Alamo City. The area just north of downtown became known as “Automobile Row,” with numerous auto showrooms, while motor courts and early motels sprung up along Austin Highway. In between, the former streetcar suburb of Alamo Heights developed with the slightly different feel of a small town main street, complete with a movie theater and small-scale shopping centers. 3902 McCullough – Olmos Bharmacy L.D. Gilmore opened Gilmore's Pharmacy in this building in 1938. The pharmacy, which also featured a soda fountain, became a popular place to meet over a milkshake. The name changed to “Olmos Pharmacy” in 1950, but the lettering on the clock above the entrance proclaimed, “Olomos.” To the rear, in 1948 a HEB grocery store was constructed, complete with pylon sign, a relatively new feature introduced to help attract the attention of a society speeding by in their automobiles. Many thanks to the generous support of our sponsors: Charlott’s Antiques, City of San Antonio District 1 Councilmember Diego Bernal, City of San Antonio Office of Cultural Affairs, City of San Antonio Office of Historic Preservation, Downtown Alliance San Antonio, El Tropicano Riverwalk Hotel, Grafxcowgirl Design, Jim’s Restaurants, Magic Lantern Castle Museum, MidTexMod, The NRP Group, Old Spanish Trail Centennial Celebration, Olmos Bharmacy, San Antonio College, Texas Historical Commission, Trinity University.