|
Collinsville
Street Scene
Photo courtesy Mike
Price, November 2007 |
History
in a Pecan Shell
Originally called Springtown, settlement began in the 1850s.
Joshua Miller donated land for the town site and a post office was
briefly in operation from 1857-1858. A woman named L. M. Collins from
Ann Arbor, Michigan opened what is believed to be the first free school
in North Texas.
The town was renamed in her honor in the 1890s when they incorporated.
A more permanent post office opened in 1872 and the railroad (The
Texas and Pacific) came through in 1881. By 1900 the town had a respectable
600 citizens - a figure it kept through the 1950s. It passed the one
thousand mark for the 1990 Census and in 2000 the population was just
over 1,200.
See Toadsuck, a ghost town absorbed
by Collinsville.
Collinsville,
Texas Images
Collinsville
Landmarks
Collinsville
Old Photos
|
Collinsville,
Texas Landmarks
|
Collinsville
Cemetery
Photo courtesy Mike
Price, November 2007 |
Collinsville,
Texas Vintage Photos
|
Dishman Cotton
Gin in Collinsville |
"Have been
told there were 3 cotton gins in Collinsville at one time. My anscestors
came from GA about the 1850s-1860s and grew cotton here. Was told
my grandfather as a boy won the county fair cotton picking contest.
He left home when of age as cotton farming wasn't for him and he
was the only boy with 7 sisters!"
- William
Beauchamp. More Cotton
Gins
|
|
Collinsville
School, early 1900s
Photo courtesy texasoldphotos.com |
Texas
Escapes, in its purpose to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing
Texas, asks that anyone wishing to share their local history, stories,
landmarks and recent or vintage photos, please contact
us. |
|
|