Issue link: http://papercitymagazine.uberflip.com/i/745743
40 S hoe shopping at Volk Brothers. Browsing aisles at Hunt Grocery Company. Catching a new flick at the swanky Village Theatre. Sipping tea in the S&S Tearoom before grabbing a bite at Sammy's Restaurant. Such was the scene when Highland Park Village — the country's first al fresco shopping center — opened in 1931. There was no Hermès, Dior, Chanel, cocktails at Lounge 31, coffee at Royal Blue Grocery, boozy lunches at Café Pacific, or Rico salad at Mi Cocina, but the town square we know today as the pinnacle of luxury was the chicest destination in Dallas in its salad days. Conceived in the early 1900s by Edgar Flippen and Hugh Prather, fashioned in its iconic Spanish Colonial style by architects Marion Fooshee and James Cheek in the late 1920s, and steered by the Henry Miller family for 33 years, HP Village celebrates its 85th anniversary this year, ushered into a posh modern era during the past eight years by owners Heather and Ray Washburne and Elisa and Stephen Summers. The two dynasties crisscross chromosomes — Heather and Elisa are sisters — and descend from the Hunt multi-branched tree. Prescient landlords for such a bastion of luxury, to be sure. FASHIONING EVEN BEFORE IT HOUSED TOM FORD AND ALEXANDER MCQUEEN, HIGHLAND PARK VILLAGE WAS THE TONIEST PLACE IN TOWN. BY LINDEN WILSON LUXURY SMU alum and Heisman Trophy winner Doak Walker and fiancée Norma Peterson (both Highland Park High School grads) shop for their wedding china at Arthur A. Everts Co. jewelry store in Highland Park Village, 1950. Walker opened Doak Walker Sports Center in HP Village the following year. The Village Theatre, pictured here in the 1940s, opened with two screens in 1935 and cost an astronomical $100,000. Cars and their maintenance were swank leisure pursuits in 1931, and Highland Park Village had a Humble gas station and Dunlap- Swain Tire Co., circa early-to-mid 1950s.