Lakewood Heights is a residential neighborhood in Dallas, Texas, bounded by Abrams Road to the east, Monticello Avenue to the north, Skillman Street to the west, and Richmond Avenue to the south. It is in the area known as East Dallas. Lakewood Heights is approximately one-half mile wide and three-quarters of a mile long. It covers approximately 240 acres or slightly less than 0.375 square miles. It is adjacent to several East Dallas neighborhoods, including Lakewood, Lower Greenville, and Wilshire Heights. The area now comprising Lakewood Heights is part of three land grants made in the 1850s by the State of Texas to, respectively, Amon McCommas, John McCommas, probably the son of Amos and Mary McCommas, and Allen Beard. Amon McCommas, his wife Mary Brumphield McCommas, and their nine children settled on this land in 1844. McCommas Boulevard, just north of Lakewood Heights, is named for the McCommas family. Beard's Branch, a creek draining into White Rock Lake east of Lakewood Heights may have been named for Allen Beard. Lakewood Heights was first platted in 1914 and was annexed to the City of Dallas in 1923. Development was substantially completed in 1940, although a few streets date from 1949-50. Building lot sizes typically are 50 to 60 feet wide and between 140 and 220 feet deep. As a neighborhood, Lakewood Heights predates neighboring Lakewood, as shown by aerial photographs of the area taken in 1923. A 1919 street map shows that the first streets platted were those between Llano Avenue on the north and Richmond on the south. Lakewood Heights comprises portions of Dallas County census tracts 2.01 and 11.02 in the 2010 U.S. federal census. According to D Magazine : the population of Lakewood Heights is 2,343; there are 1,060 households in the neighborhood; the average household size is 2.21 persons; 65.4% of houses are owner-occupied; and the median value for owner-occupied houses in Lakewood Heights is $397,526. The median age is 36.9 years; 54.1% of residents are married, 3.4% are widowed, and 12.2% are divorced. The racial make-up of the neighborhood is: 91.3% white, 1.5% African-American, 2.5% Asian, and 4.7% identify as some other race. Among those age 25 and older, 39.0% hold a bachelor's degree, 20.4% a master's degree, 7.9% a professional school degree, and 4.7% a doctorate.
Tietze Park, a 9-acre public park owned and operated by the city of Dallas, is located on the western edge of Lakewood Heights on Skillman Avenue between Llano and Vanderbilt Streets. The park was acquired in 1924 by the City of Dallas. It is named after W.R. Tietze, who was Dallas' Superintendent of Parks from 1896-1933. The park contains a sandstone picnic pavilion dating from 1934, a community swimming pool, lighted baseball field, tennis court, basketball court, serpentine walking/jogging paths, other recreation and picnic areas, and more than 75 red oak, live oak, and cedar trees, and a few “kneeling” bois d'arc trees, which are said to predate the park by 50 years or more. The Friends of Tietze Park Foundation is a registered nonprofit organization whose mission is the improvement, preservation and continued beautification of Tietze Park. In 2009, Preservation Dallas recognized the Friends of Tietze Park Foundation with a preservation achievement medal for the Best Rehabilitation of a Historic Landscape or Park. Richard Sheffield, a resident, in an article in D Magazine, wrote that the park "has been a neighborhood staple for years and has provided countless hours of entertainment to local residents."