University Oaks was first platted in 1939 and the land that the subdivision occupies was formerly owned by Ben Taub. The original deed included a racial covenant that restricted homeowners from selling or leasing their houses to any groups other than "the Caucasian race." It was last renewed in 1980. In 1984 the homeowners association had over 150 members. During that year the United States Department of Justice sued the subdivision to force it to remove the racial covenant, which was deemed illegal by the 1968 Fair Housing Act. The defendants were John Baust, the civil club president, and Anita Rodeheaver, the Harris County Clerk. In the lawsuit papers, the subdivision argued that deleting the racial covenant would jeopardize the other provisions from the original deed. In 2006, the University of Houston announced increased development plans—including one to blend low-rise residence halls with the University Oaks subdivision. Doug Erwing, who was at the time the president of the University Oaks Civic Club, announced support for plans to increase retail offerings and added that he would prefer redevelopment that fit with the neighborhood such as lower-rise dormitories as opposed to high rise dormitories.
Education
Houses in the neighborhood are zoned to Houston Independent School District schools. The community is within Trustee District IV, represented by Paula M. Harris as of 2009. Some residents are zoned to Lockhart Elementary School while others are zoned to Peck Elementary School. All residents are zoned to Cullen Middle School and Yates High School. By Spring 2011 HISD planned to consolidate Lockhart and Turner, with a new campus in the Lockhart site. By the same time frame HISD also plans to consolidate Peck and MacArthur elementary schools, with the replacement campus on the Peck site. Residents were previously zoned to Ryan Middle School. In 2013 it closed, with students rezoned to Cullen.
Elizabeth Brown-Guillory, distinguished Professor of Theatre and Associate Provost/Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs at Texas Southern University