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Plano Real Estate


Plano Texas is a bedroom community of Dallas, being about 12 miles north of downtown Dallas. It became one of the desirable places to live for newcomers, for many of the high tech industries were located in Plano and because of its proximity to downtown Dallas and the DFW airport.

Located in the "V" (with the bottom of the V representing downtown Dallas ) between Interstate 35E on the west and Interstate 75 on the east side, and the North Tollway in between, it is an easy commute to downtown Dallas from either Interstate, or to the 635 Freeway to the Dallas/Ft Worth Airport. There is something for everybody in Plano. From very expensive homes located in many affluent countryclub communities in Plano to easily affordable homes in other parts of Plano, newcomers can find a choice of beautiful homes at various prices.

There are also a variety of excellent restaurants located primarily along the Dallas North Tollway, within easy distance to anywhere in Plano.

The community of Plano originated in the early 1840s at about the same time the city of Dallas was originating. Most early pioneers came from Kentucky and Tennessee and settled in Collin County ´s blackland prairie. Their progress was halted by Indian attacks until 1844. Plano matured into a viable community from 1846 to 1850, when Dr Dye, the first medical doctor in the settlement suggested the name Plano, which meant "plain"(to describe the surrounding terrain) in Spanish.

The name " Plano " stuck and the community continued to grow and thrive to its present position in the Dallas Metroplex. Plano real estate is a highly desirable place to live in the Dallas real estate area.


History of Plano is on State Highway 75 fifteen miles north of Dallas in central Collin County. Indians killed early settlers McBain Jameson and Jeremiah Muncey in 1844, but settlers from the Peters colony moving into the area the following year met no further violence. Plano developed on the headrights of Joseph Clepper and colonist Sanford Beck when Kentucky farmer William Forman, after an 1840s scouting trip, moved to Texas with his family. Forman purchased Beck's survey in 1851, built a general store and several enterprises that formed a focal point for the sparsely settled community, and opened a post office in his home. When the town established a post office in 1852, it considered Forman and Fillmore, for President Millard Fillmore, as possible names, but postal authorities approved Plano, Spanish for "flat," suggested by Dr. Henry Dye because he understood it to mean "plain," his description of the surrounding terrain. Plano was platted and incorporated in 1873 and elected a mayor and board of aldermen that year. The public school system was organized in 1891. The Plano Institute, opened in 1882 under the direction of W. F. Mister, and the Plano Academy under Matthew C. Portman, later taken over by the public school system, were private. J. Crittenden Son and E. K. Rudolph published Plano's first newspaper, the Plano News, beginning in 1874. Early Plano industries included plumbing and stove plants, a garment factory, and an electric-wire factory. Until 1872, when the Houston and Texas Central Railway connected the community to nearby Dallas, the Shawnee Trail,  which crossed west Collin County, served as a conduit for another source of area income, cattle. Though an 1881 fire destroyed fifty-two buildings and temporarily reduced Plano to a tent city, new markets opened by 1888, when the St. Louis, Arkansas and Texas Railway Company intersected the Houston and Texas Central, and Plano became a retail outlet for productive blackland-prairie farmers. By 1890 the town had a population of 1,200, two railroads, five white churches and one black, two steam gristmill-cotton gins, three schools, and two newspapers. In 1908 Plano became an interurban stop on the Texas Electric Railroad.


Between 1900, when the population numbered 1,304, and 1960, when it reached 3,695, the town averaged an increase of just over 600 new residents per decade and remained a farming community. A dramatic increase caused by the growth of Dallas and migration to the Sun Belt during the 1970s led to major public-improvement projects, while a 1970 land reappraisal raised taxes and contributed to the demise of farming in the area. In 1970 the population was 17,872. It had more than doubled five years later, then doubled again by 1980, when the total surpassed 72,000, more than half from outside of Texas. In 1990 the population was 128,713. By the mid-1980s Plano overtook McKinney as the commercial, financial, and education center for Collin County with an estimated 1,000 businesses. Plano was the corporate home of Frito-Lay Corporation, a satellite communication system, and computer manufacturers. By 1990 it was a city of seventy-two square miles with a population of 128,713. The Farrel-Wilson Farmstead Museum ( Heritage Museum ), which occupies a former sheep ranch, provides the only evidence Plano was once a small rural farming community. Like other Collin County cities Plano traditionally voted Democratic, but as the number of farmers and native Texans declined, Republican voters increased. By the middle 1980s Texas Republicans could rely on Plano to support both state and national party tickets. Three colleges have made Plano their home: the University of Texas , formerly the Graduate Research Center of the Southwest, now in Richardson; the University of Plano , no longer in existence; and a branch of the Collin County Junior College system. Plano was home to the Dallas Americans, a professional soccer team, in the early 1980s. Each September the city hosts balloon races, for which it is nicknamed the Balloon Capital of Texas . The city has one daily newspaper, the Plano Daily Star Courier, and one radio station. In 2000 Plano had 7,726 businesses and 222,030 inhabitants.


BIBLIOGRAPHY: Friends of the Plano Public Library, Plano, Texas: The Early Years (Wolfe City, Texas: Henington, 1985). John Clements, Flying the Colors: Texas, a Comprehensive Look at Texas Today, County by County (Dallas: Clements Research, 1984). Encyclopedia of Southern Baptists (4 vols., Nashville: Broadman, 1958-82). Roy Franklin Hall and Helen Gibbard Hall, Collin County:


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