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Thomas Marsalis


Thomas Lafayette Marsalis (October 4, 1852 – April 20, 1919) was an American developer. With John S. Armstrong, the founder of Oak Cliff, he was one of the key developers of what is now known as the Dallas area.

Marsalis was born in Amite County, Mississippi, near New Orleans, Louisiana. The Marsalis family were Dutch Reformed who had immigrated to the United State in 1661. They had settled in New Jersey before Thomas Marsalis's grandfather moved to Mississippi.

Marsalis spent his childhood in Louisiana. He moved to Corsicana, Texas, where Marsalis and a partner started a wholesale grocery house. In 1872 he moved to Dallas to start his own wholesale business. This was reportedly one of "the largest and most successful operations of its kind in the South, doing $750,000 worth of business annually by 1877."

Marsalis and Elizabeth “Lizzie” Josephine Crowdus, the daughter of a prominent Dallas physician and future mayor, married November 29, 1873. They had three children.

John S. Armstrong and Marsalis became partners in the grown business in 1884. They had four such grocery warehouses in the city of Dallas. These flourished and reportedly grossed more than $20 million a year.

Marsalis was exceedingly civic-minded. He organized the first fire company in Dallas. He also was the first to pave a city street in Dallas in 1881. The material: bois d'arc blocks.

In 1887, Marsalis and Armstrong formed the Dallas Land and Loan Company, which purchased 2,000 acres (8.1 km2) across the Trinity River from Dallas, including Hord's Ridge and the Hord homestead to develop a new community. The area was named Oak Cliff. Development began in November 1887 when lots were auctioned by the company. An elevated railway was built to join the Oak Cliff from the Dallas courthouse. It was being called "beautiful suburb of Dallas."

With two successful successive auctions, Marsalis decided to take several of the lots off the market. He had hoped this would increase the price. Armstrong objected and immediately dissolved the partnership, taking the grocery concerns; Marsalis took the real estate holdings.

Marsalis continued developing Oak Cliff, including investing $500,000 of his own money for the land and various improvements, including streets, a waterworks, and electric plant. He built various amenities designed to promote Oak Cliff as a resort destination. This also included the Park Hotel, a huge four-story Victorian hotel and mineral baths. There was a public bath project planned at Kidd Springs, and, in various promotional material, the area was compared to Cambridge, Massachusetts He reportedly spent a total of million dollars promoting his new development, Oak Cliff.


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