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Magnolia Park, Houston

Magnolia Park is an area of the East End,[1] Houston, Texas, located near the Houston Ship Channel. One of the oldest Hispanic neighborhoods in the City of Houston, Magnolia Park was formerly incorporated as the City of Magnolia Park in eastern Harris County.[2]

The former city hall of Magnolia Park

History edit

 
Magnolia Park in the 1890s

In 1890 Magnolia Park was laid out on a 1,374-acre (556 ha) site on Harrisburg Road across Brays Bayou from Harrisburg and 7 miles (11 km) downstream from Houston. The plot was owned by Thomas M. Brady, and the community was named for the 3,750 magnolias planted by developers. The Magnolia Park community was organized in 1909.[2] The city incorporated in 1913, even having its own police force[3].[4]

 
1913 map of the six wards of Houston, which also indicates Magnolia Park
 
Magnolia Park and Central Park subdivisions, Houston, Texas (circa 1918)

Magnolia Park originally had non-Hispanic White Americans. Mexican-Americans from South Texas started to settle in Magnolia Park in 1911.[2] By the 1920s,[5] many Mexicans fleeing the Mexican Revolution settled in Magnolia Park.[4] The construction of the Houston Ship Channel and area industries attracted Mexicans. They worked in different fields depending on their gender, with women working in factories, stores, and textile plants and men in working in industries such as construction and maintenance of the Ship Channel, cotton compresses and cement plants.[5]

 
Harrisburg Road, Houston, Texas (postcard, circa 1910) (street car)

Canal Street in Magnolia Park was originally known as "German Street." Circa 1918 it was renamed "Belgium Street" in honor of a country invaded by Germany in World War I. At a later point the name was harmonized with that of the section in the pre-merger City of Houston, known as Canal Street.[6]

Magnolia Park was annexed to Houston in October 1926.[2] The Mexican community stayed centered in Magnolia Park partly due to discrimination from elements of the Anglo community. By 1926 Magnolia Park was called "Little Mexico" by Anglo residents of Houston. Its business district had businesses such as restaurants, grocery stores, barber shops, bakeries, drugstores, and gasoline stations.[7] By 1929 it was the largest Mexican settlement in Houston.[2]

A League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) branch was organized in 1934. In 1935 a Ladies LULAC council was organized. By the 1930s political organizations such as the Club Femenino-Chapultepec had been established to protest segregation, promote Mexican-American culture, and provide recreation. By the World War II period Magnolia Park was considered to be within the East End. Due to the war, Mexican-Americans in the Southwestern United States were drawn to Houston for jobs, and so the local population increased. By the time of World War II youth gangs were active in Magnolia Park.[2]

By the 1960s most Mexican-Americans in Magnolia Park were poor, and the middle class in Magnolia Park had expanded due to programs established by President of the United States Lyndon Baines Johnson. The Magnolia Park YWCA's women hosted the Conferencia de Mujeres por la Raza in 1971. The percentage of the residents below the poverty line in 1978 was up to 20%.[2] When the 1980s oil bust occurred, fifty factories in and around Magnolia Park closed due to the drop in oil prices, causing thousands of Mexicans to lose their jobs.[8] Magnolia Park had 14,000 residents in 1990.[2] The Magnolia Park community celebrated the neighborhood's 100 year anniversary on Saturday October 17, 2009.[4]

Many of the Historical Buildings are still there and can be seen throughout all of Harrisburg and Canal St.

Cityscape edit

In the 1920s the surrounding area had factories, industrial plants, refineries, textile mills, and wharves, giving employment opportunities to area residents.[2]

During the period including the 1950s and 1960s, writer Sigman Byrd wrote about the intersection of 75th Street (nicknamed "Six-Bit Street") and Canal Street; Byrd reported that a local had called Canal "Canine Street" because the environment was "dog-eat-dog."[9]

Government and infrastructure edit

Magnolia Park is in Houston City Council District I.[10]

 
Fire Station 20, 1976

The City of Houston operates the Magnolia Multi-Service Center.[11]

The Harris Health System (formerly Harris County Hospital District) designated the Ripley Health Center for the ZIP codes 77011 and 77012.[12] In 2000 Ripley was replaced by the Gulfgate Health Center.[13] The designated public hospital is Ben Taub General Hospital in the Texas Medical Center.[12]

Demographics edit

In 2015 the City of Houston-defined Magnolia Park Super Neighborhood had 16,999 residents. 95% were Hispanic, 3% were non-Hispanic white, and 1% was non-Hispanic black. The percentages of non-Hispanic Asians and others were both zero. In 2000 the super neighborhood had 21,302 residents. 96% were Hispanic, 3% were non-Hispanic white, and 1% was non-Hispanic black. The percentages of non-Hispanic Asians and others were both zero.[14]

Media edit

In the 1970s Papel Chicano, a newspaper that reported on activism in the Houston area, had its offices in Magnolia Park.[2]

Education edit

 
DeZavala Elementary School

Residents are zoned to Houston ISD schools.[15][14]

Sections of Magnolia Park are zoned to the following elementary schools: Burnet, Briscoe,[16] DeZavala,[17] Franklin,[18] Gallegos,[19][20] Tijerina,[21] and Edna M. Carrillo (outside of Magnolia Park).[22]

All of Magnolia Park is zoned to Edison Middle School.[23] Some of Magnolia Park is zoned to Milby High School.[24] Some of Magnolia Park is zoned to Austin High School.[25]

History of education edit

Originally the area was within the Harrisburg Independent School District. Park Junior High School opened on December 14, 1925.[26]

A school named after Lorenzo De Zavala was first established in 1926,[2] becoming the first ethnic Mexican majority school in Houston. In Houston Mexican students by law attended schools designated for Anglo Whites, but the school district opened De Zavala Elementary since area Anglo White parents felt concerned by the rise of the number of ethnic Mexican students in the area. In 1927 the school had 576 enrolled students. Circa the 1920s the administrators, who were Anglo Whites, enacted rules prohibiting students from speaking Spanish on the school property.[27]

In 1930 a private school called Escuela Mexicana Hidalgo ("Hidalgo Mexican School") was established. Its goal was to preserve Mexican culture.[2]

In February 1932 Park was renamed after Thomas Edison.[26] Before 2000, Furr High School served much of Magnolia Park.[28][29] Prior to 1997 residents zoned to Furr also had the option to attend Austin and Milby high schools; in 1997 the school district canceled the option.[30]

Transportation edit

METRO maintains the Magnolia Park Transit Center, which is on the METRORail Green Line.[31]

Greyhound Bus Lines and Autobuses Americanos maintain services at a bus station next to the transit center. On December 1, 2023, Greyhound moved its remaining services from Midtown to the Magnolia Park bus stop.[31] Houston City Council member Robert Gallegos, of District I, stated that Greyhound did not notify him of the timing in advance. Sylvester Turner, the Mayor of Houston stated that he did not know about the timing of the move until less than 24 hours before Greyhound's announcement.[32] This station has four bays for buses, less than the previous station. There were area residents who stated that they did not want the type of criminal activity that had occurred around the Midtown station.[33]

Culture edit

Salon Juárez, built in 1928, is a 48 feet (15 m) by 80 feet (24 m) two-story building that served as the meeting house for the Sociedad Mutualista Benito Juárez, a mutual aid society formed in Magnolia Park in 1919. According to Stephen Fox, who specializes in the history of architecture, this is the city's first ethnic Mexican-oriented public building not made for religious purposes. Due to financial problems during the Great Depression the society no longer managed the building after 1932. After multiple changes in ownership, the physical plant began to suffer from maintenance issues in the 1980s and 1990s because the old roof was removed but a new roof was not put on it.[34] Because the owner had not paid $20,000 in back taxes, the building was to be sold in a July 6, 2004 auction, but the taxes were paid before the auction occurred, so the owner kept the property.[35] The Greater Houston Preservation Alliance classified it as an endangered building.[34]

Gallery edit

Notable residents edit

See also edit

References edit

  • Cutler, Leigh. "Salon Juárez" (PDF). The Houston Review. 3 (2): 36–37. - Profile
  • Rodriguez, Nestor. "Hispanic and Asian Immigration Waves in Houston." in: Chafetz, Janet Salzman and Helen Rose Ebaugh (editors). Religion and the New Immigrants: Continuities and Adaptations in Immigrant Congregations. AltaMira Press, October 18, 2000. ISBN 0759117128, 9780759117129.
    • Also available in: Ebaugh, Helen Rose Fuchs and Janet Saltzman Chafetz (editors). Religion and the New Immigrants: Continuities and Adaptations in Immigrant Congregations. Rowman & Littlefield, January 1, 2000. 0742503909, 9780742503908.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Map 2011-07-11 at the Wayback Machine." East End Management District. Retrieved on March 8, 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Magnolia Park, Houston." Handbook of Texas. Retrieved on July 24, 2010.
  3. ^ "Magnolia Park Police Department, TX".
  4. ^ a b c d Hewitt, Paige. "Celebrating 100 years at Magnolia Park." Houston Chronicle. October 18, 2009. Retrieved on July 24, 2010.
  5. ^ a b Rodriguez, Nestor, p. 31.
  6. ^ Gonzales, J.R. (2019-02-05). "How German Street in Houston's Second Ward lost its name". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2019-02-08.
  7. ^ Rodriguez, Nestor, p. 32.
  8. ^ Rodriguez, Nestor, p. 34.
  9. ^ Lomax, John Nova. "Houston 101: Sig Byrd, Houston's King of True-Life Noir." Houston Press. Friday November 20, 2009. Retrieved on September 6, 2012.
  10. ^ City of Houston, Council District Maps, District I 2013-09-18 at the Wayback Machine." City of Houston. Retrieved on November 5, 2011.
  11. ^ "Magnolia Multi-Service Center." City of Houston. Retrieved on December 4, 2011. "7037 Capitol Houston, Texas 77011"
  12. ^ a b . Harris County Hospital District. 2001-11-19. Archived from the original on 2001-11-19. Retrieved 2021-04-08. - See ZIP codes 77011 and 77012. See this map for relevant ZIP code.
  13. ^ "Gulfgate Health Center" (). Harris County Hospital District. Accessed October 17, 2008.
  14. ^ a b "Super Neighborhood Resource Assessment No. 82 Magnolia Park" (PDF). City of Houston. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  15. ^ 1920 City of Houston Map." Texas Map & Blue Printing Company. Retrieved on January 13, 2011. Includes boundaries of the former City of Magnolia Park.
  16. ^ "Briscoe Elementary School Attendance Zone" (PDF). Houston Independent School District. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  17. ^ ""DeZavala Elementary Attendance Zone" (PDF). Houston Independent School District. Retrieved 2019-08-15..
  18. ^ "Franklin Elementary Attendance Zone" (PDF). Houston Independent School District. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  19. ^ "Gallegos Elementary Attendance Zone" (PDF). Houston Independent School District. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  20. ^ "Home 2012-03-06 at the Wayback Machine." Gallegos Elementary School. Retrieved on December 4, 2011.
  21. ^ "Tijerina Elementary Attendance Zone" (PDF). Houston Independent School District. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  22. ^ "Carrillo Elementary School Attendance Zone" (PDF). Houston Independent School District. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  23. ^ "Edison Middle Attendance Zone" (PDF). Houston Independent School District. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  24. ^ "Milby High School Attendance Zone" (PDF). Houston Independent School District. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  25. ^ "Austin High School Attendance Zone" (PDF). Houston Independent School District. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  26. ^ a b "." Edison Middle School. Retrieved on October 28, 2011.
  27. ^ Steptoe, Tyina. Houston Bound: Culture and Color in a Jim Crow City (Volume 41 of American Crossroads). University of California Press, November 3, 2015. ISBN 0520958535, 9780520958531. p. 96.
  28. ^ "." Houston Independent School District. April 13, 2002. Retrieved on May 6, 2009.
  29. ^ "Furr High School Attendance Zone 2011-07-26 at the Wayback Machine." Houston Independent School District. Retrieved on January 18, 2011.
  30. ^ "," Houston Independent School District. June 30, 1997. Retrieved on December 13, 2010. "CANCEL the options for students in the East End to attend Austin or Milby from Furr"
  31. ^ a b Grunau, Sarah (2023-11-29). "Houston Midtown Greyhound bus station to end service Thursday, property still listed for sale". Houston Public Media. Retrieved 2023-11-29.
  32. ^ Pearson, Lileana (2023-11-30). "Houston city leaders left in the dark as Greyhound set to move downtown hub in fewer than 24 hours". KTRK-TV. Retrieved 2023-11-30.
  33. ^ Ruiz, Anayeli; McCord, Cory (2023-11-30). "Residents express their anger, fears over safety as Greyhound bus station moves to East End". KHOU-TV. Retrieved 2023-12-06.
  34. ^ a b Cutler, p. 36.
  35. ^ Cutler, p. 36-37.

External links edit

  • Handbook of Texas Online article
  • Houston HOPE section on Magnolia Park
  • "." City of Houston. (." City of Houston. ()

29°44′10″N 95°17′28″W / 29.736°N 95.291°W / 29.736; -95.291

magnolia, park, houston, magnolia, park, area, east, houston, texas, located, near, houston, ship, channel, oldest, hispanic, neighborhoods, city, houston, magnolia, park, formerly, incorporated, city, magnolia, park, eastern, harris, county, former, city, hal. Magnolia Park is an area of the East End 1 Houston Texas located near the Houston Ship Channel One of the oldest Hispanic neighborhoods in the City of Houston Magnolia Park was formerly incorporated as the City of Magnolia Park in eastern Harris County 2 The former city hall of Magnolia Park Contents 1 History 2 Cityscape 3 Government and infrastructure 4 Demographics 5 Media 6 Education 6 1 History of education 7 Transportation 8 Culture 9 Gallery 10 Notable residents 11 See also 12 References 13 Notes 14 External linksHistory edit nbsp Magnolia Park in the 1890sIn 1890 Magnolia Park was laid out on a 1 374 acre 556 ha site on Harrisburg Road across Brays Bayou from Harrisburg and 7 miles 11 km downstream from Houston The plot was owned by Thomas M Brady and the community was named for the 3 750 magnolias planted by developers The Magnolia Park community was organized in 1909 2 The city incorporated in 1913 even having its own police force 3 4 nbsp 1913 map of the six wards of Houston which also indicates Magnolia Park nbsp Magnolia Park and Central Park subdivisions Houston Texas circa 1918 Magnolia Park originally had non Hispanic White Americans Mexican Americans from South Texas started to settle in Magnolia Park in 1911 2 By the 1920s 5 many Mexicans fleeing the Mexican Revolution settled in Magnolia Park 4 The construction of the Houston Ship Channel and area industries attracted Mexicans They worked in different fields depending on their gender with women working in factories stores and textile plants and men in working in industries such as construction and maintenance of the Ship Channel cotton compresses and cement plants 5 nbsp Harrisburg Road Houston Texas postcard circa 1910 street car Canal Street in Magnolia Park was originally known as German Street Circa 1918 it was renamed Belgium Street in honor of a country invaded by Germany in World War I At a later point the name was harmonized with that of the section in the pre merger City of Houston known as Canal Street 6 Magnolia Park was annexed to Houston in October 1926 2 The Mexican community stayed centered in Magnolia Park partly due to discrimination from elements of the Anglo community By 1926 Magnolia Park was called Little Mexico by Anglo residents of Houston Its business district had businesses such as restaurants grocery stores barber shops bakeries drugstores and gasoline stations 7 By 1929 it was the largest Mexican settlement in Houston 2 A League of United Latin American Citizens LULAC branch was organized in 1934 In 1935 a Ladies LULAC council was organized By the 1930s political organizations such as the Club Femenino Chapultepec had been established to protest segregation promote Mexican American culture and provide recreation By the World War II period Magnolia Park was considered to be within the East End Due to the war Mexican Americans in the Southwestern United States were drawn to Houston for jobs and so the local population increased By the time of World War II youth gangs were active in Magnolia Park 2 By the 1960s most Mexican Americans in Magnolia Park were poor and the middle class in Magnolia Park had expanded due to programs established by President of the United States Lyndon Baines Johnson The Magnolia Park YWCA s women hosted the Conferencia de Mujeres por la Raza in 1971 The percentage of the residents below the poverty line in 1978 was up to 20 2 When the 1980s oil bust occurred fifty factories in and around Magnolia Park closed due to the drop in oil prices causing thousands of Mexicans to lose their jobs 8 Magnolia Park had 14 000 residents in 1990 2 The Magnolia Park community celebrated the neighborhood s 100 year anniversary on Saturday October 17 2009 4 Many of the Historical Buildings are still there and can be seen throughout all of Harrisburg and Canal St Cityscape editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2012 In the 1920s the surrounding area had factories industrial plants refineries textile mills and wharves giving employment opportunities to area residents 2 During the period including the 1950s and 1960s writer Sigman Byrd wrote about the intersection of 75th Street nicknamed Six Bit Street and Canal Street Byrd reported that a local had called Canal Canine Street because the environment was dog eat dog 9 Government and infrastructure editMagnolia Park is in Houston City Council District I 10 nbsp Fire Station 20 1976The City of Houston operates the Magnolia Multi Service Center 11 The Harris Health System formerly Harris County Hospital District designated the Ripley Health Center for the ZIP codes 77011 and 77012 12 In 2000 Ripley was replaced by the Gulfgate Health Center 13 The designated public hospital is Ben Taub General Hospital in the Texas Medical Center 12 Demographics editIn 2015 the City of Houston defined Magnolia Park Super Neighborhood had 16 999 residents 95 were Hispanic 3 were non Hispanic white and 1 was non Hispanic black The percentages of non Hispanic Asians and others were both zero In 2000 the super neighborhood had 21 302 residents 96 were Hispanic 3 were non Hispanic white and 1 was non Hispanic black The percentages of non Hispanic Asians and others were both zero 14 Media editIn the 1970s Papel Chicano a newspaper that reported on activism in the Houston area had its offices in Magnolia Park 2 Education edit nbsp DeZavala Elementary SchoolResidents are zoned to Houston ISD schools 15 14 Sections of Magnolia Park are zoned to the following elementary schools Burnet Briscoe 16 DeZavala 17 Franklin 18 Gallegos 19 20 Tijerina 21 and Edna M Carrillo outside of Magnolia Park 22 All of Magnolia Park is zoned to Edison Middle School 23 Some of Magnolia Park is zoned to Milby High School 24 Some of Magnolia Park is zoned to Austin High School 25 History of education edit Originally the area was within the Harrisburg Independent School District Park Junior High School opened on December 14 1925 26 A school named after Lorenzo De Zavala was first established in 1926 2 becoming the first ethnic Mexican majority school in Houston In Houston Mexican students by law attended schools designated for Anglo Whites but the school district opened De Zavala Elementary since area Anglo White parents felt concerned by the rise of the number of ethnic Mexican students in the area In 1927 the school had 576 enrolled students Circa the 1920s the administrators who were Anglo Whites enacted rules prohibiting students from speaking Spanish on the school property 27 In 1930 a private school called Escuela Mexicana Hidalgo Hidalgo Mexican School was established Its goal was to preserve Mexican culture 2 In February 1932 Park was renamed after Thomas Edison 26 Before 2000 Furr High School served much of Magnolia Park 28 29 Prior to 1997 residents zoned to Furr also had the option to attend Austin and Milby high schools in 1997 the school district canceled the option 30 Transportation editMETRO maintains the Magnolia Park Transit Center which is on the METRORail Green Line 31 Greyhound Bus Lines and Autobuses Americanos maintain services at a bus station next to the transit center On December 1 2023 Greyhound moved its remaining services from Midtown to the Magnolia Park bus stop 31 Houston City Council member Robert Gallegos of District I stated that Greyhound did not notify him of the timing in advance Sylvester Turner the Mayor of Houston stated that he did not know about the timing of the move until less than 24 hours before Greyhound s announcement 32 This station has four bays for buses less than the previous station There were area residents who stated that they did not want the type of criminal activity that had occurred around the Midtown station 33 Culture editSalon Juarez built in 1928 is a 48 feet 15 m by 80 feet 24 m two story building that served as the meeting house for the Sociedad Mutualista Benito Juarez a mutual aid society formed in Magnolia Park in 1919 According to Stephen Fox who specializes in the history of architecture this is the city s first ethnic Mexican oriented public building not made for religious purposes Due to financial problems during the Great Depression the society no longer managed the building after 1932 After multiple changes in ownership the physical plant began to suffer from maintenance issues in the 1980s and 1990s because the old roof was removed but a new roof was not put on it 34 Because the owner had not paid 20 000 in back taxes the building was to be sold in a July 6 2004 auction but the taxes were paid before the auction occurred so the owner kept the property 35 The Greater Houston Preservation Alliance classified it as an endangered building 34 Gallery edit nbsp 1920 six wards of Houston map which also indicates Magnolia Park nbsp Thomas A Edison Middle SchoolNotable residents editTexas Senator Mario Gallegos 4 See also edit nbsp Texas portal nbsp Latino and Hispanic American portalHistory of the Mexican Americans in HoustonReferences editCutler Leigh Salon Juarez PDF The Houston Review 3 2 36 37 Profile Rodriguez Nestor Hispanic and Asian Immigration Waves in Houston in Chafetz Janet Salzman and Helen Rose Ebaugh editors Religion and the New Immigrants Continuities and Adaptations in Immigrant Congregations AltaMira Press October 18 2000 ISBN 0759117128 9780759117129 Also available in Ebaugh Helen Rose Fuchs and Janet Saltzman Chafetz editors Religion and the New Immigrants Continuities and Adaptations in Immigrant Congregations Rowman amp Littlefield January 1 2000 0742503909 9780742503908 Notes edit Map Archived 2011 07 11 at the Wayback Machine East End Management District Retrieved on March 8 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l Magnolia Park Houston Handbook of Texas Retrieved on July 24 2010 Magnolia Park Police Department TX a b c d Hewitt Paige Celebrating 100 years at Magnolia Park Houston Chronicle October 18 2009 Retrieved on July 24 2010 a b Rodriguez Nestor p 31 Gonzales J R 2019 02 05 How German Street in Houston s Second Ward lost its name Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2019 02 08 Rodriguez Nestor p 32 Rodriguez Nestor p 34 Lomax John Nova Houston 101 Sig Byrd Houston s King of True Life Noir Houston Press Friday November 20 2009 Retrieved on September 6 2012 City of Houston Council District Maps District I Archived 2013 09 18 at the Wayback Machine City of Houston Retrieved on November 5 2011 Magnolia Multi Service Center City of Houston Retrieved on December 4 2011 7037 Capitol Houston Texas 77011 a b Clinic Emergency Registration Center Directory By ZIP Code Harris County Hospital District 2001 11 19 Archived from the original on 2001 11 19 Retrieved 2021 04 08 See ZIP codes 77011 and 77012 See this map for relevant ZIP code Gulfgate Health Center Archive Harris County Hospital District Accessed October 17 2008 a b Super Neighborhood Resource Assessment No 82 Magnolia Park PDF City of Houston Retrieved 2019 08 15 1920 City of Houston Map Texas Map amp Blue Printing Company Retrieved on January 13 2011 Includes boundaries of the former City of Magnolia Park Briscoe Elementary School Attendance Zone PDF Houston Independent School District Retrieved 2019 08 15 DeZavala Elementary Attendance Zone PDF Houston Independent School District Retrieved 2019 08 15 Franklin Elementary Attendance Zone PDF Houston Independent School District Retrieved 2019 08 15 Gallegos Elementary Attendance Zone PDF Houston Independent School District Retrieved 2019 08 15 Home Archived 2012 03 06 at the Wayback Machine Gallegos Elementary School Retrieved on December 4 2011 Tijerina Elementary Attendance Zone PDF Houston Independent School District Retrieved 2019 08 15 Carrillo Elementary School Attendance Zone PDF Houston Independent School District Retrieved 2019 08 15 Edison Middle Attendance Zone PDF Houston Independent School District Retrieved 2019 08 15 Milby High School Attendance Zone PDF Houston Independent School District Retrieved 2019 08 15 Austin High School Attendance Zone PDF Houston Independent School District Retrieved 2019 08 15 a b History of Thomas Edison Middle School Edison Middle School Retrieved on October 28 2011 Steptoe Tyina Houston Bound Culture and Color in a Jim Crow City Volume 41 of American Crossroads University of California Press November 3 2015 ISBN 0520958535 9780520958531 p 96 High Schools Houston Independent School District April 13 2002 Retrieved on May 6 2009 Furr High School Attendance Zone Archived 2011 07 26 at the Wayback Machine Houston Independent School District Retrieved on January 18 2011 1996 1997 HISD ATTENDANCE BOUNDARIES Houston Independent School District June 30 1997 Retrieved on December 13 2010 CANCEL the options for students in the East End to attend Austin or Milby from Furr a b Grunau Sarah 2023 11 29 Houston Midtown Greyhound bus station to end service Thursday property still listed for sale Houston Public Media Retrieved 2023 11 29 Pearson Lileana 2023 11 30 Houston city leaders left in the dark as Greyhound set to move downtown hub in fewer than 24 hours KTRK TV Retrieved 2023 11 30 Ruiz Anayeli McCord Cory 2023 11 30 Residents express their anger fears over safety as Greyhound bus station moves to East End KHOU TV Retrieved 2023 12 06 a b Cutler p 36 Cutler p 36 37 External links editHandbook of Texas Online article Houston HOPE section on Magnolia Park Magnolia Park Super Neighborhood Community Health Profile City of Houston Archive City of Houston Archive 29 44 10 N 95 17 28 W 29 736 N 95 291 W 29 736 95 291 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Magnolia Park Houston amp oldid 1200462464, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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