I'm really glad I found it because it's a great photo showing Waco's size back then, (about 30,000 in 1917). Today Waco has 120,000 in the city and 226,189 in the metro (2005). The city covers 95 square miles. Waco was founded around 1849, with the first city block being planned and first house being built that year. The city was named in honor of the Waco Indians who lived in the area until the Cherokee forced them to move north. What's amazing is that just 21 years after the city's first structure was built, a log cabin, the longest suspension bridge west of the Mississippi River was constructed. 62 years later the city would have one of the tallest buildings in the state, the Alico Building.
It also shows the density compared to the plethora of parking lots now days. It's actually pretty impressive. I see at least 6 or 7 highrises there. This is compared to the 5 that Austin had at the same time. As I mentioned in my photo thread of Waco, the city was hit with an F5 tornado in 1953. It was the deadliest ever to hit Texas. 114 people died and 597 were injured. 30 of them died when a 6-story department store building collapsed, and 61 were killed on a single block. The city was devastated, and never really fully came back.
Last November I rode my bike all over downtown Waco and Baylor University. See if you can spot any buildings from this pano in my photos. Have a look:
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/showthread.php?t=141054