Reinhardt, Texas
USGenWeb >> TXGenWeb >> Dallas County >> Towns & Communities >> Reinhardt, Texas
Latitude | 32.8351269 325006N |
Longitude | -96.6891635 0964121W |
Elevation feet/meters |
538/164 |
Zip Code | |
Founded | |
GNIS FID | 1378949 |
TXGenWeb Site | |
Cemeteries | |
Library | |
Local Genealogy Society | |
Wikipedia | |
Tripp | |
Matthew Hayes Nall
Reinhardt was on the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad in what became the Casa Linda area of Dallas in eastern Dallas County. Dixon Branch ran through Reinhardt and entered White Rock Lake a mile to the west. The community, originally known as Ola, was on the land grant of W. S. B. Anderson and a road from Mesquite. Ola had a post office from 1884 to 1886. In 1886 the Gulf, Colorado, and Santa Fe Railway built northward from Dallas through the area, and the community was renamed Reinhardt after the president of the railroad. It opened a post office, which was discontinued in 1930. By the end of 1886 the community had three churches, several stores, a hotel, a school, and a racetrack. In 1890 Reinhardt had a population of thirty-seven that supported a railway station and telegraph office, a general store owned by postmaster E. H. Ueckert, and a physician named E. H. Forde. The town had one school with eighty-two white pupils and one teacher and another with thirty-five black pupils and a teacher. In 1910 the community had a population of 100 and several stores, including two drugstores, a bank, and a cotton gin. By 1932 one store, a bank, and a cotton gin remained. In the 1940s Reinhardt served primarily as an overnight stop for travelers. In 1945 the population was 100. That year the site was annexed to Dallas.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Sam Hanna Acheson, Dallas Yesterday, ed. Lee Milazzo (Dallas: Southern Methodist University Press, 1977).
Handbook of Texas Online, Matthew Hayes Nall, "REINHARDT, TX"