Field Trips To Dallas
African American Museum
Housing one of the nation’s most extensive and best
collections of folk art, the museum at Fair Park is dedicated
to preservation and display of historical, artistic and
cultural contributions made by African Americans.
Age of Steam Railroad
Museum
This outdoor exhibit at Fair Park allows visitors to relive
the golden age of the passenger train, and features the
world’s largest diesel electric locomotives.
American Airlines C.R.
Smith Museum
American Airlines history unfolds here from humble beginnings
through five eras of flight. Video presentations, interactive
displays, a 2-seater flight simulator, an IWERKS movie “Spirit
of America,” and other flight-related activities are
on tap. Housed in a glass hangar is the Flagship Knoxville,
a restored 1940s DC-3.
Cavanaugh Flight
Museum
The Cavanaugh collects, maintains, and flies an extensive
collection of aircraft, as well as artwork and artifacts
from World War I through the Vietnam conflict. The significant
and rare aircraft comprise one of the nation’s largest
private aviation collections.
Dallas Aquarium
Marine and freshwater fish, reptiles, amphibians and invertebrates
from Walking Batfish and Electric Torpedo Rays to a six-foot-long
Alligator Gar all star at this Art Deco facility at Fair
Park, built in 1936 to coincide with the Texas Centennial,
with a saltwater section added in 1964. Special attractions
include the Amazon Flooded Forest, and the World of Aquatic
Diversity. As the first to breed and rear Texas Blind Salamanders,
the aquarium also is known for maintaining and breeding
the desert pupfish, and is one of only two aquariums to
breed the now extinct species Megupsilon aporus.
Dallas Mavericks
The Dallas Mavericks bring new energy and excitement to
the court as the NBA team plays at the American Airlines
Center.
Dallas Museum of Art
Formerly the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, the Dallas Museum
of Art traces beginnings to 1903, with the facility opening
in 1909 in Fair Park under the name Free Public Art Gallery
of Dallas. In 1991, a $30-million expansion was designed
by Edward Larrabee Barnes to help create mini-museums. The
old gallery now houses the Museum of Africa and Asia, the
Museum of Europe, and the Museum of Contemporary Art. The
Nancy and Jake Hamon Building, completed in 1993, houses
the Museum of the Americas, with art from Pre-Columbian
to the mid-1940s.
Dallas Neighborhoods
Well worth exploration are Dallas’ eclectic neighborhoods.
Among them are Deep Ellum, described as a Southern Soho;
The West End, with family fun by day and and exciting nightlife;
Uptown, in the heart of the antique district; Knox-Henderson,
with quaint, old-world style; Highland Park, described as
the Beverly Hills of Texas; Swiss Avenue, a grand boulevard
with historic homes; and the Dallas Arts District, a 17-block
area covering some 60 acres of downtown.
Dallas Stars Hockey
The Dallas Stars take to the ice at the American Airlines
Center, opened in 2001 at a cost of about $325 million with
a design that puts fans closer than ever to the action.
Platinum seats have a host of comforts and amenities, and
there are 143 luxury suites on the Flagship, Platinum and
Admiral levels.
J. Erik Jonsson Central Library
Named in memory of Texas Instruments’ J. Erik Jonsson,
this eight-floor library has a copy of the Declaration of
Independence, printed on July 4, 1776. Also on the seventh
floor on permanent display in a special room is First Folio,
printed in 1623, and the first complete printing of Shakespeare’s
plays. In the second floor Children’s Center, is a
hand-crafted scale model of the 8th century Viking ship
Drakkar.
Lone Star Park at Grand Prairie
This 36,000-square-foot pavilion is open six days a week
for thoroughbred and quarterhorse racing during Thoroughbred
Season, April-July and Quarterhorse Season, October-November.
Nasher Sculpture Center
Occupying a full city block downtown, the Nasher Sculpture
Center (opening in mid-October, 2003) features a 54,000-square-foot
building and a 1.5 acre sculpture garden designed by architect
Renso Piano in collaboration with landscape architect Peter
Walker. The $70-million Center, adjacent to the Dallas Museum
of Art, provides a home for the internationally acclaimed
Raymond and Patsy Nasher Collection of modern and contemporary
works. Rodin, Degas, Picasso, Matisse, and many other renowned
artists are represented. Raymond Nasher was one of the first
real estate developers to put art in commercial complexes.
Six Flags Over Texas
From giant-sized coasters to family-friendly rides, Six
Flags Over Texas has thrilled generations. Now Superman
Tower of Power, the tallest ride of its kind in the world
at 325 feet high, allows guests to fly like the Man of Steel
himself.
Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey
Plaza
Each year more than two million visitors pay homage at downtown’s
Dealey Plaza where John F. Kennedy was assassinated. The
Sixth Floor Museum within the former Texas School Book Depository
building (where the investigative Warren Commission concluded
Lee Harvey Oswald shot the president) contains a permanent
exhibition on JFK’s life, times, death, and legacy.
Two evidentiary areas tied with the shooting are preserved,
including the alleged sniper’s perch. Artifacts include
the Zapruder camera that recorded the infamous footage,
and the FBI model of Dealey Plaza used by the Warren Commission.
Southfork Ranch
In 1978, a legend was created rivaling any other series
in television history, as an unknown Texas ranch became
recognized worldwide. The series was "Dallas," the family the Ewings, and the ranch was Southfork, where
the Dallas legend lives on well beyond the 356 episodes
produced. Guided tours of the Ewing mansion and grounds
spotlight memorabilia from the gun that shot J.R. to Lucy's
wedding dress and Jock's Lincoln Continental.
Texas Rangers Baseball
The Texas Rangers play major league baseball from April
through October at the Ballpark in Arlington. The Ballpark
complex includes the Legends of the Game Baseball Museum,
Children’s Learning Center, and Dr Pepper Youth Ballpark.
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