Heather Denton has lived in the 109 for the past six years. She is a teacher at Paschal High School and travels from her apartment down South Hulen Drive and then up Bellaire Drive to West Berry Street to work every day.
Debris from the Dec. 5 implosion of the west grandstand of Amon G. Carter Stadium is now being removed, and 98 percent of it should be gone by the end of January, to be recycled for use in future projects.
The 109’s Colonial Country Club recently hosted a breakfast to award $175,000 to various charities around Fort Worth, capping a year where $6.1 million has been raised through the efforts of the Crowne Plaza Invitational, Colonial and the PGA.
During the nearly 15- year period since the Fort Worth Library came online in the mid-‘90s, patrons have experienced unfiltered access to the Internet at all of the system’s locations. Now for the first time ever, library officials say the
Rick Kubes is perfectly happy with business to his jewelry shop being down 4 percent. In a market where being down 20 to 30 percent is the accepted norm, 4 percent is a good year.
But Kubes Jewelers on Berry Street in the 109 hasn't been around
It has been about 14 years since Mike Irwin camped outside St. Andrew’s Catholic School, located at 3304 Dryden Road in the 109, but he remembers it as if it were just yesterday. For two days, he waited patiently along with other individuals to t
The 109 is a prime location and mortgage rates are low, but people looking to live in the area are following national and regional trends and choosing to lease apartments or houses rather than buy a home.
Residents of the 109 who look forward to the holiday season’s carols, Christmas lights, and Santa’s presents can easily forget that they’re not the only ones looking forward to the holidays.
During tough economic times, the word “free” rarely goes unnoticed, but in a quiet corner, neatly tucked away under the Forestry page of the City of Fort Worth’s website, resides one seemingly odd phrase: Free Trees.
It doesn’t have a football team, and most 109ers may not even know this college exists – but the College of St. Thomas More has been quietly creating a tradition of classical learning for three decades now.