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Tag: Jacksboro Highway

  • Lake Worth police shoot, kill suspect after vehicle chase Friday

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    A suspect was killed by Lake Worth police officers after a chase Friday night, according to a post on the department’s social media.

    The incident occurred near Jacksboro Highway and Paul Meador Road at about 8 p.m., police told Star-Telegram media partner WFAA.

    Officers began chasing a wanted suspect after a traffic stop, police said.

    During the chase, the suspect’s vehicle broke down, and police saw the suspect pull “what appeared to be” a weapon, according to WFAA. Officers then shot the suspect.

    Four officers were involved in the incident; none was injured, police said.

    The Texas Rangers will investigate the incident, officials said on X.

    More details about the shooting were not immediately available Friday evening.

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    Lillie Davidson

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lillie Davidson is a breaking news reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. She graduated from TCU in 2025 with a bachelor’s degree in journalism, is fluent in Spanish, and can complete a crossword in five minutes.

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  • One of Fort Worth’s oldest Tex-Mex restaurants is empty, for sale

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    Mexican Inn Cafe No. 2, built in 1949 in the gambling-and-honky-tonk heyday of the Jacksboro Highway but closed for five years, is for sale.

    The location, 612 N. Henderson St. next to the “Wind Roundabout” sculpture, is the oldest remaining building for a company started in 1936 by gambler Tiffin Hall.

    The No. 2 location is now at a major gateway to retail development on Westside Drive. It was completely remodeled in 2021, but never reopened after road construction and the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Chris Carroll, owner of nine Mexican Inn locations and also Spring Creek Barbeque, originally remodeled the restaurant to serve growing development on Panther Island and in near west Fort Worth.

    The Mexican Inn No. 2 property on North Henderson Street, built in 1949, as seen as Nov. 15, 2025.
    The Mexican Inn No. 2 property on North Henderson Street, built in 1949, as seen as Nov. 15, 2025. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    But new plans for the $1.7 billion Westside Village development just west have made the property more attractive.

    “Things are hot over there,” Carroll said.

    The first Mexican Inn was opened in 1936 by gambler Tiffin Hall at 115 E. Fifth St. It eventually expanded into the corner space location downtown at 516 Commerce St. and closed after a 1987 fire.

    It is known nationally as the first restaurant on record to serve arroz con pollo Mexicano, a dish with pulled chicken and queso over rice, It also advertised chicken in mole sauce, unusual at a time when Tex-Mex restaurants were featuring enchilada and taco plates.

    The first Mexican Inn Cafe location opened in 1936 at 516 Commerce St. It was followed in 1949 by Mexican Inn No. 2, 612 N. Henderson St. The No. 1 location was destroyed by fire in 1987.
    The first Mexican Inn Cafe location opened in 1936 at 516 Commerce St. It was followed in 1949 by Mexican Inn No. 2, 612 N. Henderson St. The No. 1 location was destroyed by fire in 1987. Jill Johnson Star-Telegram archives

    Locally, it’s known for its Fritos-style chips.

    The Mexican Inn Cafes are the fourth oldest Tex-Mex restaurant company in North Texas, trailing El Fenix (1918), The Original Mexican Eats Cafe (1930, although the restaurant claims 1926) and Joe T. Garcia’s Mexican Dishes (1935).

    The Henderson Street location is decorated with the company’s signature azure blue tile work and trim.

    It’s described in the “Handbook of Texas” as the beginning of “Thunder Road,” a 4-mile stretch of Jacksboro Highway known in the 1950s for gambling halls, seven flashy dance nightclubs, six liquor stores and a legacy of high-roller gaming, late-night carousing and organized crime.

    The Mexican Inn No. 2 location was built in 1949 and upgraded with even more elaborate tile work, as seen Nov. 15, 2025.
    The Mexican Inn No. 2 location was built in 1949 and upgraded with even more elaborate tile work, as seen Nov. 15, 2025. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    Rock, country and blues musicians made the Mexican Inn a regular stop on the way to or from the Stockyards. Country singer Ernest Tubb (”Waltz Across Texas,” “Walking the Floor Over You”) had his tour bus detour to the restaurant every time the band was anyplace near North Texas.

    Coincidentally, the building is not the Mexican Inn company’s oldest. The location at 1625 Eighth Ave. was built in 1948 for a different Tex-Mex restaurant.

    Mexican Inn Cafes’ distinctive chips are like homemade Fritos. The restaurants opened in 1936, not long after Fritos originated in San Antonio in 1932.
    Mexican Inn Cafes’ distinctive chips are like homemade Fritos. The restaurants opened in 1936, not long after Fritos originated in San Antonio in 1932. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

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    Bud Kennedy’s Eats Beat

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Bud Kennedy is celebrating his 40th year writing about restaurants in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He has written the “Eats Beat” dining column in print since 1985 and online since 1992 — that’s more than 3,000 columns about Texas cafes, barbecue, burgers and where to eat.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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