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The history of New Texas, the Texas we know today—oil-rich,
insufferably loud, and unbearably proud of itself—begins in the
late 1920s, when a horned frog wakes from its thirty-one-year nap
in a courthouse cornerstone and flabbergasts the nation. In
slightly over two decades ten individuals—their words, actions,
and accomplishments—come to define the New Texas of the
twenty-first century. While the history of Old Texas rests on
oft-told legends of Houston, Austin, Travis, Crockett, Rusk, Lamar,
and Seguin, today’s New Texas—proud, loud, self-promotional,
sports-crazy, and too rich for its own good—is the Texas that
percolates throughout the nation’s popular culture. In Texas
Loud, Proud, and Brash: How Ten Mavericks Created the
Twentieth-Century Lone Star State, author Rusty Williams profiles
ten largely unsung men and women responsible for the Texas you
love, hate, and (secretly) envy today. Sidebar content throughout
the book features historic anecdotes and words of wit and wisdom
from Boyce House’s numerous speeches and books about Texas.
In 1950 Dallas was a spirited Texas town of some regional
importance; by 1980 it was an international city, one of the
nation’s most populous, a center of trade, transportation,
finance, pro sports, and popular culture. Historic Photos of Dallas
in the 50s, 60s, and 70s documents this amazing
transformation with seldom-seen photographs of the period. Nearly
200 historic images show Dallas in the process of refashioning its
skyline, its streets, its institutions, its public behavior, and
its sense of self and worth. Historic Photos of Dallas in the
50s, 60s, and 70s blends striking black-and-white images with
crisp commentary to chronicle moments of joy, pride, and anguish
during these tumultuous decades. This volume takes readers back to
the not-so-long-ago Dallas of trolley buses, downtown movie
theaters, and four-lane expressways, then shows how the city
transcended its parochial beginnings to become one of the most
dynamic American cities of the twentieth century.
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