Grayson County

Grayson County, Texas

Grayson County, Texas

Grayson County, Texas. Photograph by Herbert Smith.
Grayson County, Texas

Grayson County, Texas

Map of Grayson County, Texas. Map Credit: Robert Plocheck.

Grayson County, in north central Texas, is bordered by the Red River and by Fannin, Collin, Denton, and Cooke counties. The county seat, Sherman, which lies approximately sixty-five miles north of Dallas, is part of the Sherman-Denison Metropolitan Statistical Area. The county's center point is at 33°40' north latitude and 96°40' west longitude. Grayson County, 934 square miles in area, has an elevation ranging from 600 to 800 feet and generally level terrain with some low hills. The northern part, which drains into Lake Texoma and the Red River, is characterized by acidic soils of the Post Oak Belt, with loamy or sandy surfaces. The southern areas, which drain to tributaries of the Trinity River, have blackland soils conducive to the growth of trees such as post oak, bois d'arc, elm, and walnut, as well as various types of grasses. Natural resources include limestone, oil and gas, bituminous coal, and sand and gravel. Grayson County is drained principally by Choctaw Creek and its two main tributaries, Post Oak and Iron Ore creeks. The county has an average annual precipitation of thirty-seven inches, temperatures ranging from an average low in January of 30° F to an average high of 96° in July, and a growing season that averages 227 days a year.

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 colony in the early 1840s, settlement of the region progressed rapidly. On March 17, 1846, Grayson County, named for Peter W. Grayson, attorney general of the Republic of Texas, 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 Sherman 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.

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Donna J. Kumler | © TSHA

Handbook of Texas Logo

Adapted from the official Handbook of Texas, a state encyclopedia developed by Texas State Historical Association (TSHA). It is an authoritative source of trusted historical records.

Currently Exists

Yes

Place type

Grayson County is classified as a County

Altitude Range

500 ft – 930 ft

Size

Land area does not include water surface area, whereas total area does

  • Land Area: 932.8 mi²
  • Total Area: 979.2 mi²

Temperature

January mean minimum: 33.1°F
July mean maximum: 92.1°F

Rainfall, 2019

43.6 inches

Population Count, 2019

136,212

Civilian Labor Count, 2019

63,050

Unemployment, 2019

6.8%

Property Values, 2019

$14,110,237,516 USD

Per-Capita Income, 2019

$42,195 USD

Retail Sales, 2019

$2,174,744,457 USD

Wages, 2019

$560,315,084 USD

Grayson County

Highlighted:
  • Grayson County
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Place Type Population (Year/Source) Currently Exists
Town
Town 90 (2014) Yes
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town 1,540 (2021) Yes
Town
Town
Town
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Town
Town
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Town 50 (2014) Yes
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town 1,931 (2021) Yes
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town 25,179 (2021) Yes
Town 17 (2014) Yes
Town 69 (2021) Yes
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town 15 (2014) Yes
Town
Town 40 (2014) Yes
Town
Town 40 (2014) Yes
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town 165 (2014) Yes
Town
Town
Town
Town 2,255 (2021) Yes
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town 3,615 (2021) Yes
Town
Town 30 (2014) Yes
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town 20 (2009) Yes
Town
Town
Town 776 (2021) Yes
Lake Yes
Town
Town
Town
Town 118 (2014) Yes
Town
Town 639 (2014) Yes
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town 161 (2014) Yes
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town 48 (2009) Yes
Town
Town
Town 2,613 (2021) Yes
Town 2,217 (2021) Yes
Town
Lake Yes
Town
Town
Lake Yes
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town 337 (2021) Yes
Town
Town 15 (2014) Yes
Town
Town
Town 44,873 (2021) Yes
Town 778 (2021) Yes
Town
Town
Town 1,013 (2021) Yes
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town 1,192 (2021) Yes
Town
Town
Town 933 (2021) Yes
Town
Town
Town
Lake Yes
Town 5,165 (2021) Yes
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town
Town 4,217 (2021) Yes
Town 1,753 (2021) Yes
Town
Town

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