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Texas Counties
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Texas Counties
Texas is divided into 254 counties, more than any other U.S. state Texas was originally divided into municipalities, a unit of local government under Spanish and Mexican rule. When the Republic of Texas gained its independence in 1836, there were 23 municipalities, which became the original Texas counties. Many of these would later be divided into new counties. The most recent county to be created was Kenedy County in 1921. The most recent county to be organized was Loving County in 1931
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Grayson County, Texas

Grayson County History, Geography, Demographics, Cities and Towns, and Education

County Seat: Sherman
Year Organized: 1846
Square Miles: 934
Court House:

100 West Houston
County Courthouse
Sherman, TX 75090-5958

Etymology - Origin of County Name

Peter Wagener Grayson, an attorney general of the Republic of Texas

Demographics:

County QuickFacts: Census Bureau Quick Facts

County History

Grayson County is a county located in the U.S. state of Texas. It is named after Peter Wagener Grayson, an attorney general of the Republic of Texas. The seat of the county is Sherman.


Various Caddo groups, including the Kichai, Ionis, and Tonkawa Indians, were the earliest known inhabitants of the area that became Grayson County. These Indians, agriculturalists who found the soils of the area suitable to their way of life, traded and negotiated with the Spanish and French, who moved up the Red River during the eighteenth century to establish trading posts. French and Spanish expeditions resulted in the initial settlements established in 1836-37 at Preston Bend on the Red River, at Pilot Grove in the southeastern part of the county, and at Warren. After the establishment and surveying of the Peters colonyqv in the early 1840s, settlement of the region progressed rapidly. On March 17, 1846, Grayson County, named for Peter W. Grayson,qv attorney general of the Republic of Texas,qv was marked off from Fannin County. The legislative action also specified that the county seat be called Sherman. The naming of the county seat in honor of Gen. Sidney Shermanqv was apparently an effort to effect a compromise between supporters of Sherman, an anti-Houston Whig, and Grayson, a pro-Houston Democrat. Sherman has the distinction of being one of the few towns in the Lone Star State named by an act of the legislature

More at

Geography

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 979 square miles (2,536 kmē), of which, 934 square miles (2,418 kmē) of it is land and 46 square miles (118 kmē) of it (4.67%) is water.

Neighboring Counties:

  • Marshall County, Oklahoma (north)
  • Bryan County, Oklahoma (northeast)
  • Fannin County (east)
  • Collin County (south)
  • Denton County (southwest)
  • Cooke County (west)
  • Love County, Oklahoma (northwest)

Cities and Towns:

- Bells town Incorporated Area
- Collinsville town Incorporated Area
- Denison city Incorporated Area
- Dorchester town Incorporated Area
- Gunter city Incorporated Area
- Howe town Incorporated Area
- Knollwood village Incorporated Area
- Pottsboro town Incorporated Area
- Sadler city Incorporated Area
- Sherman (County Seat) city Incorporated Area
- Southmayd city Incorporated Area
- Tioga town Incorporated Area
- Tom Bean city Incorporated Area
- Van Alstyne city Incorporated Area
- Whitesboro city Incorporated Area
- Whitewright town Incorporated Area

County Resources:

Enter County Resources and Information Here

County Resources
Counties: US Map
The history of our nation was a prolonged struggle to define the relative roles and powers of our governments: federal, state, and local. And the names given the counties, our most locally based jurisdictions, reflects the "characteristic features of this country!"

But age, size and colorful names of our counties isn't the only reason to explore counties' role in American history, or the history of county government itself. In fact, the story of county government reflects the larger meanings of American history.

Today's counties are the most flexible, locally responsive and creative governments in the US. They are the most diverse, varying in size, population, geography, and governmental structure. In their politics and policies, they express a 1990's political slogan "Think globally, act locally."
 
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