Sundance Square Native American Sites
Burke Burnett Building on Main - present-day Worthington Bank
Burke Burnett and Quanah Parker were very close friends. Burke was a rancher and leased land from some of the Indian reservations, Quanah's land in the Comanche Nation being among them. The Burke Burnett Building was built in 1914 and restored in 1980. It is currently located on Main Street in Downtown Sundance Square Fort Worth.
500 Main Street | Fort Worth, Texas 76102
Heritage Trail Markers
Take a walk through downtown and discover the people and events that shaped Fort Worth's rich history. See the Marker detailing Cynthia Ann Parker's abduction from her family compound at Fort Parker during a Comanche raid.
Main Street | 8th Street | Fort Worth, Texas 76102
Historic Pickwick hotel
In 1885, Quanah Parker and another Comanche Chief named Yellow Bear were sharing a room while visiting Fort Worth. A gas lamp in the Chief's room was not extinguished properly and resulted in death for Yellow Bear. Quanah survived the accident. It was never determined which of the two chiefs didn't extinguish the lamp properly. The Hotel is no longer standing but was near the location of the Chisholm Trail Mural.
115 W. 3rd Street | Fort Worth, Texas 76102
Sid Richardson Museum
This free downtown museum features permanent and special exhibitions of paintings by the two iconic artists of the American West, Frederic Remington and Charles Russell, as well as some of their contemporaries. Many of the works in the collection depict the life of Plains Indians in the 19th century. Visit www.sidrichardsonmuseum.org for more info.
309 Main Street | Sundance Square | Fort Worth, Texas 76102