Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Dallas, TX







Alice, a Dallas Cowboy Cheerleader, showed us around "The Big D" today and it was great! We learned about the sad story of John F. Kennedy and we went to the new Dallas Stadium among many other things. We even went on the roller coasters down at Six Flags; and we learned about the 6 flags. Snapple and Chucky Cheese both started in Dallas and we got to try some Snapple drinks too!

"Everything is big in Texas," "Live Large, Think Big" those are just a couple of things that we heard today in Dallas. What a neat town and amazing and sometimes sad history. We rode on the Texas Star and went out to Southfork Ranch. Who shot Jr?

Dallas is the third-largest city in the state of Texas and the ninth-largest in the United States. Residents of Dallas are called Dallasites. The city covers 385 square miles and is the county seat of Dallas County. As of July 1, 2006, U.S. Census estimates put central Dallas at a population of over 1.2 million. The city is the main economic center of the 12-county Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington metropolitan area—at 6 million people, it is the fourth-largest metropolitan area in the United States. Dallas is listed as a gamma world city by the Loughborough University Globalization and World Cities Study Group & Network.

Dallas was founded in 1841 and formally incorporated as a city on 2 February 1856. The city's economy is primarily based on the petroleum industry, telecommunications, computer technology, banking, and transportation. It is the core of the largest inland metropolitan area in the United States and lacks any navigable link to the sea—Dallas's prominence despite this comes from its historical importance as a center for the oil and cotton industries, its position along numerous railroad lines, and a strong industrial and financial sector.