|
CANTON, TEXAS
First Monday
Trade Days
Van
Zandt County Seat, Central
Texas North
32°33'13" North, 95°52'0" West (32.553576, -95.866710)
One mile S of I-20 on Hwy 19
60 miles SE of Dallas
Population: 3,610 (2010) 3,292 (2000)
|
Canton
is famous for it's First Monday Trade Days. Once a month. Thursday
through Sunday before the First Monday. Estimates are now up
to 250,000 visitors per month.
There are several parallels between Mardi Gras and First Monday. One
is that everyone should experience it once. You can then decide if
you want to go back. In Canton's case you also need to go back and
see the town for its tranquility. |
Historical Marker
(at Groves and Capitol, entrance to First Monday Trade Days grounds:
Canton: The
Misplaced County Seat
The Texas Legislature
created Van Zandt
County in 1848. It originally included nearly 2,000 square miles
of territory. Jordan's Saline, now Grand
Saline, was near the county's geographic location and became the
first seat of government. Two years later, with the creation of Wood
County from part of Van
Zandt, officials had to select a new county seat based on the
changed boundaries.
In December 1850, the Commissioners Court purchased 320 acres of land
from Obey W. Owens and sent a surveyor to determine the right site
for the new town of Canton. Officials soon built a courthouse, jail
and post office in the new town, but in less than three years the
county discovered an error in the survey. The new county seat was
actually two-and-a-half miles from the county's land. Canton, it turned
out, was on property owned by John George Woldert. He donated 160
acres of land to the county in January 1853, however, to avert the
legal crisis. Despite Woldert's generosity, which meant county officials
did not have to move the county seat or pay him for the mistake, many
Van Zandt County
residents were unhappy with the situation and wanted Canton relocated
to the site as originally planned. So great was the resentment that
following construction of a brick courthouse in 1857, county voters
elected officials who refused to pay for the building for many years.
The debt was finally resolved in 1880.
Today, Van Zandt's
county seat remains on the wrong site. Since the surveying mistake
more than 150 years ago, though, the city of Canton has grown into
a regional commercial center, known most notably for its First Monday
Trade Days.
(2004) |
The Free
State of Van Zandt is sometimes used to describe the independent
nature of the county's citizens. Besides the incident of marching
armed to Will's
Point, Van Zandters also dynamited or otherwise destroyed dipping
tanks in the late 1890s. The state had made dipping cattle mandatory
when tick-fever was rampant. Maybe they should've asked nicer. |
Canton, Texas
Attractions / Landmarks
The
Van Zandt County Courthouse
Van
Zandt County Pioneer Monument
Hillcrest Cemetery
- Dating back to the town's original plat, the Cemetery contains
the graves of most of Canton's notables. Located on Hwy 19, two
blocks North of Highway 64.
The
Cherokee Line - The Cherokee Boundary Line, an important part
of East Texas, finally got the recognition it deserves recently
in a ceremony on a oiltop road north of Canton... more
Book Hotel Here Canton
Hotels
|
"Where'd
Everyone Go" - A scene near Canton
Photo courtesy John Stankewitz 02-07-2005 |
|
Canton
water tower & storefront
TE photo |
More Canton,
Texas Area Destinations
Van
Zandt County Towns
Mill Creek
Reservoir - On Arnold Paul Road off Texas 243
Take FM 17
NW 11 miles to Grand
Saline, from there Hwy 80 West 14 miles to Mineola.
Take Hwy 18
South 27 miles to Athens
Take Hwy 64
SE 40 miles to Tyler
Canton Tourist Information
Canton Chamber of Commerce - 903-567-2991
315 First Monday Lane Canton, TX 75103
http://www.cantontx.com/
|
|
Texas
Escapes, in its purpose to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing
Texas, asks that anyone wishing to share their local history, stories
and recent/vintage photos, please contact
us. |
|
|