5 minute read

Brenna Elliott

Next Article
Terra at Eataly

Terra at Eataly

EDUCATE. PRESERVE. DISCOVER.

Meet the woman working to save visual aids for Dallas history ›

Interview by RENEE UMSTED | Photography by EMIL LIPPE

Brenna Elliott’s fascination with history began at Dallas cemeteries.

“Somehow, don’t ask me, I don’t know, I got into studying cemeteries — going to cemeteries, filming, taking pictures and making slideshows and putting music to it and then learning about everybody I had just filmed,” she says.

She had already retired when she began diving into local history. As a student at Stephen F. Austin State University, she had taken some flying lessons and decided she wanted to be a commercial pilot. But her parents said no.

Her first real job was back in Dallas, her hometown, working three years for an edible nut broker whom Elliott says was the first person in the city to have an automobile phone. There, she learned about sales and marketing and how to deal with everyone from a businessperson in New York City to a farmer in San Saba.

By then it was the late ’70s, and Elliott relocated to Houston. She was hired at an employee-placement firm, M. David Lowe, where she worked for two years.

“I learned the most outstanding basics of recruiting and headhunting, the most honorable and the way it should be,” Elliott says.

But she really missed Dallas, so she moved back.

With support in the form of a $6,000 loan from her father, she opened her own firm, Lusk & Associates. Her client list included Trammell Crow and Raymond Nasher, who was also the landlord of her office, which was located in NorthPark Center. Later, Elliott opened a temporary division, “which can turn you into a serial killer overnight,” she says, because of the intense pressure to fill spots on short notice with quality candidates that would fit a company’s needs.

She had the same employees during the 25-year run of her company. Then she joined a friend and started a retain-search business called SearchScience. Part of the appeal was that she would be paid a retainer up front; she had been working on commission since she was 28 years old.

For the last seven or eight years of her career, she was doing about four deals a year in the retain-search industry, mostly finding candidates for the C-suite positions.

Then she retired and began studying cemeteries all across Dallas. Once, she was even chased by three doberman pinschers in one in South Dallas.

Cemeteries got her hooked on history, and she started getting acquainted with neighbors who had a breadth of knowledge on the subject.

Having grown up in Dallas, Elliott already had a feel for the city. She spent her middle- and high-school years on Princess Lane in Sparkman Estates.

“It was stable and a good place to hang around and lay in the grass in people’s yard and play games,” she says of the neighborhood.

Elliott joined the Dallas History Facebook group and met Debby Massie Lacy, the group’s founder who became Elliott’s mentor. After Lacy died, Elliott didn’t immediately create her own history group. But she was at the car wash one day, and “Live and Let Die” started playing on the speaker. Lacy was a huge fan of the Beatles, and hearing that song gave Elliott the confidence she needed to establish her own group.

She founded Dallas History Guild in 2015 with the goal to educate, preserve and discover. It now has 11,000 members. She hopes to one day have a brickand-mortar museum.

“I formed Dallas History Guild because I wanted to be a voice when I have a petition going for something that’s being destroyed that I can take before the Landmark Commission, or somebody can, and push that forward,” Elliott says.

Until the pandemic started, the guild also hosted events. Once, they visited the Dallas Police Department Museum and then were loaded in paddy wagons to go to the Mounted Unit in Fair Park.

“We’re not a memories group. We’re not a shoutout group,” Elliott says. “It’s like you’re in a classroom but you’ve got a good professor and you’re having lots of fun.”

In 2018, Elliott, a graduate of Thomas Jefferson High School, was appointed to the Dallas Historical Commission by Judge Clay Jenkins, and she served a two-year term. During that time, she was part of the effort to approve historical markers for Little Egypt and Martyr’s Park.

Over the years, she’s met some of Dallas’ most notable movers and shakers. She interviewed the widow of Henry Beck of The Beck Group, a construction and architectural firm. She attended a family reunion of the Buhrer family, dairy farmers whose land was in East Dallas.

Elliott has also interviewed members of the Goforth family. The City of Dallas acquired more than 400 acres of land from them during construction of White Rock Lake. Elliott has known Teresa Goforth since elementary school and also interviewed her father, David.

And she became friends with Beverly Heart, who had ties to Casa Linda Plaza and Estates. It was developed by her father, Howard Brown, who was following the vision of her grandfather, Carl Martin Brown.

“We’ve got to continue the awareness,” Elliott says. “And it’s not what you remember that, for us, is critical. It’s the history.”

TOP 25 PRESTON HOLLOW

Susie Swanson

214.533.4656

susie.swanson@compass.com

“Susie is much more than just a great agent. She is a partner. As repeat clients many times over–we really value Susie’s ability to intuitively understand what we are looking for and to provide exceptional, concierge-like service. She is extremely skilled at negotiating every step.”

– Rich and Alisha

SUSIE SWANSON

MEG BEAIRD GROUP

“Meg is so knowledgeable about the Dallas market and seemed to predict our needs before we even knew them ourselves. Meg was also a terrific communicator, keeping us organized and informed throughout the whole process.”

Meg Beaird

214.236.5008

meg.beaird@compass.com

$17M+

ACHIEVED IN 2021

PROUD TO HAVE HELPED 94 FAMILIES

MAKE A MOVE IN 2021

Your Preston Hollow neighbor and Realtor for nearly 20 years. Also awarded Top Realtor for Lakewood and Lake Highlands.

JOHN C. WEBER REAL ESTATE

John C. Weber

214.679.2427

john.weber@compass.com

MERIDITH HAYES

“Meridith was fantastic to work with on both sides of the transaction. She was insightful, smart, super knowledgeable, available, and most of all, very fun. We appreciate her hard work and we’ll tell anyone who asks to work with her!”

Meridith Hayes

214.799.7476

meridith.hayes@compass.com

TOP 25 PRESTON HOLLOW

This article is from: