Architectural detail of Downtown Dallas‘ Magnolia Hotel, originally opened in 1922 as the Magnolia Petroleum Building.
The red Pegasus sign atop Downtown Dallas‘ Magnolia Hotel is a relic of the building’s original incarnation as the headquarters of Magnolia Oil—later to become Mobil—as well as being a symbol of the city.
Dallas’ iconic symbol—the 11-foot-tall neon Pegasus atop the Magnolia Petroleum Building—rises into the sky over Downtown.
Dallas’ iconic symbol—the 11-foot-tall neon Pegasus atop downtown’s Magnolia Petroleum Building—rises above the neighboring Gulf States Building.
Dallas’ Magnolia Hotel, built as the headquarters of the Magnolia Petroleum Company in 1922, sits across the street from the 1984’s Whitacre Tower, world headquarters for AT&T.
A stylized pegasus on a streetlight pole and the classic pegasus sign atop the Magnolia Hotel in Downtown Dallas.
Detail of Dallas’ Magnolia Building (now the Magnolia Hotel), built in 1921 as the headquarters of the Magnolia Petroleum Company, which was later absorbed into Mobil Oil.
The Magnolia Hotel—originally built as the headquarters of the Magnolia Petroleum Company (later Mobil)—in Downtown Dallas, Texas.