Historic Carver Heights is a neighborhood in south-east Fort Worth.
Carver Heights was specifically developed as a neighborhood of high quality houses for Black professionals, meant to appeal to the growing demographic of the Black middle class.[1] The neighborhood was named after George Washington Carver, and construction began shortly after 1950.[1][2] The developer imposed protective deed restrictions that limited the type and quantity of commercial activity in the neighborhood.[3]
Many residents who moved into the neighborhood in the 1950's and 1960's achieved "firsts" as they pushed past the restrictions of Jim Crow and acquired positions previously denied to them due to segregation.[4]
Carver Heights neighborhood was zoned as an historic district by the city of Fort Worth in 2006.[5] The boundaries of the neighborhood are Stalcup Rd. on the west, E. Rosedale Ave. on the north, S. Cravens Rd. on the east, and Ramey Ave. on the south.[6]
In 2017, a sculpture, titled The Ancestors, was installed in Historic Carver Heights. It commemorates the significance of the neighborhood and its early residents in local Black history.[7]
Notable residents
edit- Reby Cary (educator, politician, historian)
- L. Clifford Davis (attorney, judge)
References
edit- ^ a b Cary, Reby (2010). Carver Heights : where the "best" begins : a roll call of pioneers et al.
- ^ City of Fort Worth, Development Services. "Historic Carver Heights".
- ^ Selcer, Richard F. (2015). A history of Fort Worth in black & white: 165 years of African-American life (First ed.). Denton, Texas: UNT Press. ISBN 978-1-57441-616-9.
- ^ Staff, The FWR (2023-10-08). "Historic Carver Heights is home to many Fort Worth 'firsts'". Fort Worth Report. Retrieved 2024-06-27.
- ^ City of Fort Worth, Development Services. "Historic Carver Heights Design Guidelines" (PDF).
- ^ City of Fort Worth, Planning and Development (October 15, 2007). "Carver Heights Local Historic District" (PDF).
- ^ "Public Art Debuts at Historic Carver Heights". Fort Worth Magazine. 2017-11-30. Retrieved 2024-06-29.