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Alone in the Wilderness

The Birthplace of DFW

When the families of Bird's Fort abandoned their troubled settlement on the West Fork of the Trinity River in the spring of 1842, the place seemed destined to become no more than a miserable, inconsequential footnote in the area’s history. Instead, it became the spark that ignited the growth of a remote North Texas wilderness into the 4th largest metropolitan area in the United States. The DFW Metroplex was born at—and out of—Bird's Fort. This 111-acre parcel of land and water, now nestled peacefully within the Viridian community of North Arlington, is truly the last vestige of a time and place that pitted Anglo-American settlers against Native American tribes in a sequence of events that would set the course for the future of North Texas.

Unfortunately, the story of Bird's Fort and its shaping of today's Texas has received little recognition. Precious few reliable background materials have been available, and a high percentage of accounts found online or in print publications propagate a legacy of error and misrepresentation that ranges from minor inaccuracies to outright myths. In short, there's a high probability that whatever you've read about Bird's Fort is wrong.

It is the purpose of this website, then, to gather all available research materials into a comprehensive, searchable repository. Here, current and future historians can tap into those resources, consider the reliability of each, and begin to correct the record on the Lone Star State's most significant historic site north of the San Jacinto Battleground, the Alamo, and the State Capitol.

Repository: Essential Reading

Bird's Fort

Bird's Fort

In 1936 the State of Texas, through its Commission of Control for Centennial Celebrations, allocated two official historical markers for placing at sites in Tarrant County that are significant in the history of the Republic of Texas. One of the sites that received a Centennial marker... Read More

General Edward H. Tarrant and the Men Who Rode to Village Creek

General Edward H. Tarrant and the Men Who Rode to Village Creek

The seventy men rode in the semblance of a military column through the north Texas prairie, the grass tall and still green from the spring rains. However, the men's clothing displayed no semblance... Read More

Jonathan Bird's Fort: Birthplace of the DFW Metroplex

Jonathan Bird's Fort: Birthplace of the DFW Metroplex

The early Anglo military campaigns into the three forks of the Trinity had hardly been decisive. But if they had intimidated the Indians at all, if they had compelled the warriors... Read More

The John Beemans: First Family of Dallas

The John Beemans: First Family of Dallas

The Beemans are the founding family of Dallas. An early journalist described Dallas in 1842: "Col. Bryan in his tent and Capt. Gilbert in his cabin, constitutes the City of Dallas ... and the 3 Beeman families the county... Read More

History of Tarrant County From Its Beginning Until 1875

History of Tarrant County From Its Beginning Until 1875

The beginnings of Tarrant County are closely associated with the life and work of Colonel Middleton Tate Johnson, the establishment of Bird's Fort, and to some extent with the colonization plans of the Peters Land Company... Read More

Birds Fort Treaty Ratification Proclamation

Bird's Fort Treaty Ratification Proclamation

To all and singular to whom these presents shall come, Greeting: Whereas, a treaty of peace and friendship between the Republic of Texas and the Delaware, Chickasaw, Waco, Tah-woc-cany, Keechi, Caddo, Ana-dah-kah, Ionie, Biloxi, and Cherokee... Read More

Repository: Recent Additions

Late from the Frontier: Indian Treaty

Late from the Frontier: Indian Treaty

By Gen. Tarrant and Capt. Booth, who arrived on Tuesday evening from the treaty ground, we learn the following in relation to... Read More

History of Fannin County, Texas, 1836-1843

History of Fannin County, Texas, 1836-1843

The history of Fannin County may be said to begin with the arrival within its subsequent area of Dr. Daniel Rowlett and a party of six associated families during... Read More

A Ku Klux Klan Rally at the Site of Bird's Fort

A Ku Klux Klan Rally at the Site of Bird's Fort

A Ku Klux Klan rally was held at the former site of Bird's Fort on the evening of June 16, 1979 when the land was... Read More

Moscoso's Trail Through Texas

Moscoso's Trail Through Texas

Luis de Moscoso Alvarado was a member of Hernando De Soto's expedition to explore La Florida—today's southeastern United States—and to obtain gold and other riches... Read More

Setting the Record Straight: Fort Worth and the Historians

Setting the Record Straight: Fort Worth and the Historians

Every town, if it stays around long enough, accrues its share of local lore masquerading as history. In the case... Read More

Document

Fire Threatens Historic Bird's Fort Monument in Texas

Firefighters had difficulty finding a fire in a remote area strewn with off-road trails Sunday afternoon. The blaze was quickly contained... Read More