That's what people with no good evidence always say.
The article just says that it was the first theater with air conditioning but doesn't say when that was installed. I'm willing to take your word for the cooling tower, but can you point it out in the photo?
The article just says that it was the first theater with air conditioning but doesn't say when that was installed.This is what Jerry provided in post #64 of this thread (ask him for more exact information about where this is from):
“The Texas was the first air conditioned theater in Dallas; the original equipment is still in place (long since updated) as of Jun 14, 2012.”Dr Willis Carrier designed the first modern day air conditioning system in 1902. If I remember correctly from the Wikipedia article, the Texas Theater was built in the early thirties. Jerry’s quote implies (to me) that the air conditioning system was the original equipment installed when the theater was built. (If it wasn’t, then it wouldn’t be the original equipment.) By the sixties any theater that didn’t have air conditioning in Dallas Texas was way behind the times and most likely (don’t you love that word?) didn’t have many customers.
Edit: The theater in my hometown was built in 1935 with air conditioning included. Dallas, TX was much larger than my hometown back then. These are good reasons to believe that it is likely that the Texas Theater was built with air conditioning included also.
can you point it out in the photo?Sure, if you look above the right side of the billboard with the little red wagon (more or less above the rear of the wagon), there is a parapet wall that appears to run east and west and hides the lower portion of the cooling tower. The upper portion of the tower is visible above the parapet wall.