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Preston, Texas

Preston, also known as Preston Bend,[citation needed] is an unincorporated community and census-designated place located on the Red River in Grayson County, Texas, United States. It grew in the 19th century at the intersection of several military and trade roads and was an important crossing on the Shawnee cattle trail. Preston lost prominence after the MK&T railroad bypassed the town to the east, leading to a decline in traveler and cattle drive traffic. Much of its former town site is submerged beneath the waters of Lake Texoma. Its population was 2,096 as of the 2010 census.[1]

Preston, Texas
Census-designated place
Nickname: 
Preston Bend
Preston
Preston
Coordinates: 33°53′1.28″N 96°38′1.23″W / 33.8836889°N 96.6336750°W / 33.8836889; -96.6336750
CountryUnited States
StateTexas
CountyGrayson
Settled1836
Founded by
Area
 • Total8.1 sq mi (21.1 km2)
 • Land5.1 sq mi (13.1 km2)
 • Water3.1 sq mi (8.0 km2)
Elevation
708 ft (216 m)
Population
 (2010)
 • Total2,096
 • Density416/sq mi (160.6/km2)
Time zoneUTC-6 (CST)
FIPS code48-59420
GNIS feature ID1380395

History

 
Preston in 1856

Early settlement

Before European settlement, the general area of Preston had been occupied by the Caddo people, with the Comanche and Kiowa farther to the west. One of the first American settlers in the area was John Hart, who cultivated land at the bend in the Red River possibly before 1826. He left the area just after 1830 after being attacked by Indians during a trapping expedition on the Washita River.[2]

During the 1830s, the United States relocated the Five Civilized Tribes from the Southeastern United States to the Indian Territory, on the north side of the Red River. As the first official United States expedition to the area, the Dodge-Leavenworth Expedition explored the region in 1834. Above Preston on the Red River Leavenworth Camp, situated just west of the mouth of the Washita River,[3] the area was a base for this expedition. George Catlin made some of his famous Indian paintings from this camp.[3]

In the fall of 1838, John Hart returned to the Washita Bend area with two partners.[2][4] They cleared and fenced 17 acres (69,000 m2) and built three cabins.[2] In 1838, the partnership dissolved and Hart took sole possession of the land.[2] He leased the land to a tenant.[2]

Holland Coffee and the trading post

Holland Coffee and Silas Cheek Colville created Coffee, Colville, and Company to establish a trading post on the Red River.[5] After establishing three trading posts upstream, they established one in the Washita Bend.[6][7] They occupied the area of Washita Bend after John Hart's tenant was killed by Indians.[2] Hart later sued Coffee for the land, but lost.[2][7] In 1837, Holland Coffee had been elected to the Texas Legislature[8] and negotiated a peace treaty between the Republic of Texas and the Waco, Tawakoni, Kichai, and Towash (Pawnee) peoples on September 2, 1838, at a Shawnee village near the mouth of the Washita River.[9][10]

The town of Preston grew up around the trading post established by Coffee and Colville.[11][12]

The Trading Post of Holland Coffee site received a historic marker in 1936.[13]

Roads and trails

Preston developed at the junction between the Indian Territory's Texas Road, leading north to Missouri, and what became the Preston Road, leading south farther into Texas.[11] Roughly following a much older trail used by Native Americans for centuries, in 1840–1841, Colonel William Gordon Cooke created the military road from Coffee's trading house on the Red River to Austin.[12] The Preston Road was originally 100 miles (160 km) long, from Preston to the Trinity River at Dallas.[8]

Fort Preston

The Republic of Texas commissioned Colonel Cooke to make a supply post in the area,[12] known as Fort Preston after Captain William Gilwater Preston, a member of the military road expedition of 1840–1841. Some doubt remains that the town was named after him, and the origin of the name of the town is obscure.[11] In 1840, Cooke was in charge of a company of men there.[11][14][15] Coffee and other settlers were thinking about leaving the area before Cooke arrived.[4] The village around Fort Preston grew up to be known as Preston, Texas.[14] Fort Preston was established 80 yards west of the eastern bend in the river, on a bluff about 40 to 50 feet (12 to 15 m) above the river.[8] Some of the buildings at Fort Preston were made of bricks made in the area.[8]

Later, the United States Army operated a depot to supply the Fifth Infantry from here.[11] The Army depot operated from 1851 to 1853.[12] The Preston Supply Depot was under the command of Lt. Thomas C. English and later by Bvt. Maj. W. F. Wood.[11] Albert Sidney Johnston and the Second Cavalry came through Preston in 1855.[11]

Glen Eden

When Holland Coffee married Sophia Suttonfield Aughinbaugh in 1839,[12] they resided at his trading post in a 100-foot (30 m) square log stockade on the Red River.[8][12] The stockade enclosed several huts and cabins.[8] In 1843, Coffee began building Glen Eden as a proper house for his wife, 2 miles (3 km) west of his trading post.[8][12] It was completed in 1845.[15] Holland Coffee was killed on October 1, 1846.[11] Sophia later married several more times, and Glen Eden became the most famous residence in the area.

The town

Preston developed in the area around Coffee's trading house and was a considerable town in 1845 when William H. Hunt completed its town plat survey.[8][11][12] The municipal government was established in 1851 with Tom Jackson as the first mayor.[12] Preston's Masonic lodge was established in 1852.[12] A United States post office was established in 1856,[12] and later a post office operated from 1880 to 1914.[11] Preston had general stores[11] and at least one blacksmith shop.[16]

Cattle crossing

As the cattle business developed in Texas and cattle trails to processing facilities in Kansas became necessary, the Shawnee Trail developed through the Preston area.

The crossing had been an important wagon crossing before 1850, with over 1,000 wagons crossing there in a year.[11]

Ferries

Log raft ferry service was available at the trading post in 1839.[4]

Holland Coffee, George Butts, and Slone Love operated ferries in the area.[11]

Rock Bluff Ferry operated near the mouth of the Washita River close to Preston.[3] In the late 1830s, James Tyson operated the ferry at the rock bluff. His ferry was little more than a log raft.[14] Later, two partners owned this ferry, Jim Shannon and Bud Randolph.[14]

Around 1853, Ben Colbert opened up his ferry downstream to cash in on the California gold rush.[14] Preston was located on one branch of the California Trail, where it crossed into Texas from the Indian Territory.[3][16]

About 6 miles (10 km) west of Colberts was Thompson's Ferry, run by James George Thompson, first chief justice in Grayson County. Thompson's home became the first post office and courthouse in the county.[8]

Hopes for expansion

Supplying the military posts in the frontier area was difficult. One idea was to expand and supply the army depot at Preston by steamboat. This plan was abandoned in 1853 due to the difficulty of navigating the upper Red River because of the Great Raft logjam.[17] Later, after the destruction of the Great Raft, steamboats on the Red River were finally able to navigate up the river to Preston.[18] Preston had a steamboat landing.[19]

In 1847, the Texas Legislature ordered a road to be built from Preston to Sherman.[8]

In 1853, Congress funded an exploration of the best route west of the Mississippi for a transcontinental railroad. In February 1854, an expedition of 75 men led by Capt. John Pope surveyed a route along the 32nd parallel north from New Mexico to Preston. Secretary of War Jefferson Davis favored this path, though it was tabled until after the Civil War. This route was afterwards abandoned.[17] After the Civil War, the First transcontinental railroad was surveyed and constructed farther to the north.

Decline

Although Preston developed as the largest community in the area for many years, several factors led to its decline. When new counties were created by the Texas Legislature, their county seats were located near the center of the counties. After the Texas Legislature created Grayson County from Fannin County, the county seat was designated near the center of the new county, at Sherman. As the county government developed, the focus of growth left Preston. The site of Sherman was situated east of the Preston Trail and caused travelers passing through the area from the north to the south to gravitate east of Preston.

Butterfield trail

The Butterfield Overland Mail stage route, between St. Louis and San Francisco, began operation in 1857. The line ran across the Indian Territory from Fort Smith, Arkansas, to the Red River at Colbert's Ferry, a few miles east of Preston. The stage line had decided to bypass Preston as the traditional crossing on the Red River.[4] Colbert's Ferry became a more popular crossing over the Red River as Sherman and McKinney developed.[11] In 1857, Sherman was very small, made up of only two or three small stores. Much of the brick and material came from older buildings at Preston.[8] By 1871, 14 stage lines were operating through Sherman.[4]

MK&T Railroad

After the Civil War, the peace treaty between the United States and the Five Civilized Tribes allowed for a railroad to be built north and south across the Indian Territory. This railroad, the Missouri, Kansas and Texas, crossed the Red River near Colbert's Ferry to the east of Preston in 1871. By this time Preston had begun to decline and was largely abandoned.[11] As other cities along the railroad's route prospered, Preston became a rural community.[12]

20th century

 
Area around Preston in 1922

In the 20th century, Preston had a public school system, two churches, a cotton gin, and a cemetery.[12] In the 1930s, the town had about 20 residents.[12]

New Preston developed more centrally within the bend.[11]

Lake Texoma

The United States Congress authorized Lake Texoma's construction by the Flood Control Act of 1938 approved June 28, 1938, (Public Law 75-791) for flood control and generation of hydroelectric power. The lake's area submerged the Preston townsite. The United States Army Corps of Engineers bought all the land in the area in the late 1930s for Lake Texoma.[12]

After the filling of Lake Texoma, only the cemetery was left from Preston; which was on high ground overlooking the town.[12] The cemetery was expanded with a new section when Lake Texoma was created. Some of the existing graves that were to be under the lake were moved to the new section of the cemetery.

Preston Point is the peninsula in Lake Texoma that was the high ground overlooking the town of Preston. An unincorporated community named Preston exists on this peninsula, consisting largely of campgrounds and recreational cabins.

Demographics

2020 census

Preston racial composition[20]
(NH = Non-Hispanic)[a]
Race Number Percentage
White (NH) 1,845 87.82%
Black or African American (NH) 6 0.29%
Native American or Alaska Native (NH) 35 1.67%
Asian (NH) 6 0.29%
Pacific Islander (NH) 1 0.05%
Some Other Race (NH) 6 0.29%
Mixed/Multi-Racial (NH) 113 5.38%
Hispanic or Latino 89 4.24%
Total 2,101

As of the 2020 United States census, there were 2,101 people, 834 households, and 355 families residing in the CDP.

2000 census

The population of Preston was 325 in 2000.[11]

Geography

Preston was located in Texas on its border with the Indian Territory (later the state of Oklahoma) in the Red River Valley on a river bend just downstream from the river's confluence with the Washita River. The area was also known as Washita Bend or Coffee Bend. This area is located a few miles east of the Cross Timbers on the upper Red River above the former Great Raft logjam. A rock bluff overlooked the Red River from the Texas side of the river, 100 to 110 feet (30 to 34 m) above the river's low-water mark. This bluff at Preston marked the ford of an old Indian trail on the Red River.[23] This ford was later used as the Red River crossing point of the Shawnee Cattle Trail. Later, the bluff also marked the return route of Captain Randolph B. Marcy's expedition from Santa Fe to Fort Smith in 1849.[23] The Oklahoma side of the river was a relatively flat, sand-covered plain and terraces sloping gently to the river.[24]

The current Preston CDP occupies the entire Preston Peninsula, bordered to the west by the main body of Lake Texoma and to the east by the Little Mineral Arm of the lake. The peninsula ends to the north at Preston Point, and the CDP extends south to the base of the peninsula, at Meadow Lake Drive to the east and at Highport Road to the west. Texas State Highway 289 has its northern terminus in Preston and leads south 7 miles (11 km) to Pottsboro. Denison is 14 miles (23 km) to the southeast, and Sherman, the Grayson County seat, is 20 miles (32 km) to the south-southeast.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the Preston CDP has a total area of 8.1 square miles (21.1 km2), of which 5.1 square miles (13.1 km2) are land and 3.1 square miles (8.0 km2), or 38.02%, are covered by water, consisting of the adjoining waters of Lake Texoma.

References

  1. ^ "Geographic Identifiers: 2010 Demographic Profile Data (G001): Preston CDP, Texas". American Factfinder. U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved March 22, 2017.[dead link]
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Johnson, John G. "Hart, John". TSHA Handbook of Texas Online. Retrieved November 24, 2008.
  3. ^ a b c d Bryce, J. Y. (September 1930). "Temporary Markers of Historic Points". The Chronicles of Oklahoma. Oklahoma Historical Society. 8 (3): 282–290. Retrieved November 20, 2008.
  4. ^ a b c d e Erlichman, Howard (2006). Camino Del Norte: How a Series of Watering Holes, Fords, and Dirt Trails Evolved Into Interstate 35 in Texas. Texas A&M University Press. p. 284. ISBN 9781585444731.
  5. ^ Britton, Morris L. "Coffee's Station". TSHA Handbook of Texas Online. Retrieved January 6, 2013.
  6. ^ Britton, Morris L. "Coffee, Holland". TSHA Handbook of Texas Online. Retrieved January 6, 2013.
  7. ^ a b Britton, Morris L. "Colville, Silas Cheek". TSHA Handbook of Texas Online. Retrieved November 24, 2008.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Petersen, Paul (2007). Quantrill in Texas: The Forgotten Campaign. Cumberland House Publishing. p. 267. ISBN 9781581825824.
  9. ^ Moore, Stephen (March 2006). Savage Frontier: Rangers, Riflemen, and Indian Wars in Texas. University of North Texas Press. ISBN 9781574412055.
  10. ^ DeShields, James; Bradley, Matt (1912). Border Wars of Texas. The Herald company. pp. 400.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Britton, Morris L (January 18, 2008). "Preston, Tx (Grayson County)". TSHA Handbook of Texas Online. Retrieved November 20, 2008.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Baker, T. Lindsay (1991). Ghost Towns of Texas. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 208. ISBN 9780806121895.
  13. ^ "Site of the Trading Post of Holland Coffee - Marker Number:7349". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1936.
  14. ^ a b c d e Gard, Wayne (1984). The Chisholm Trail. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 296. ISBN 9780806115368.
  15. ^ a b Federal Writers' Project, Writers' Program (Tex.), Writers' Program Texas (1940). Texas: A Guide to the Lone Star State. US History Publishers. p. 718. ISBN 9781603540421.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ a b Morrison, W.B. (June 1927). . The Chronicles of Oklahoma. 5 (2). Archived from the original on July 23, 2008. Retrieved November 20, 2008.
  17. ^ a b Smith, Thomas (1999). The U.S. Army and the Texas Frontier Economy, 1845-1900. Texas A&M University Press. p. 307. ISBN 9780890968826.
  18. ^ Tolman, Keith. "Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture - Steamboats and Landings". Retrieved November 20, 2008.
  19. ^ Wright, Muriel (March 1930). "Early Navigation and Commerce along the Arkansas and Red Rivers in Oklahoma". The Chronicles of Oklahoma. 8 (1): 65–88.
  20. ^ "Explore Census Data". data.census.gov. Retrieved May 22, 2022.
  21. ^ https://www.census.gov/[not specific enough to verify]
  22. ^ "About the Hispanic Population and its Origin". www.census.gov. Retrieved May 18, 2022.
  23. ^ a b Wright, Muriel (June 1933). "Historic Places on the Old Stage Line from Fort Smith to Red River". The Chronicles of Oklahoma. 11 (2): 798–822.
  24. ^ Survey, Oklahoma Geological (1917). Oklahoma Geological Survey Bulletin Number 19. Norman, Oklahoma.
  1. ^ Note: the US Census treats Hispanic/Latino as an ethnic category. This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category. Hispanics/Latinos can be of any race.[21][22]

Further reading

  • Foreman, Grant. Down the Texas Road: Historic Places Along Highway Number 69 Through Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press, 1936, Pp. 46.
  • Landrum, Grahm and Smith, Allen. "Grayson County" (Fort Worth, 1960; 2d ed., Fort Worth: Historical Publishers, 1967).
  • Lucas, Mattie D. and Hall, Mita H. A History of Grayson County (Sherman, Texas, 1936).
  • Marcy, R. B., The Prairie Traveler unknown date, publisher
  • Middlebrooks, Audy J. and Glenna P. "Holland Coffee of Red River," Southwestern Historical Quarterly 69 (October 1965).
  • Morrison, W.B. Colbert Ferry on Red River, Chickasaw Nation, Indian Territory The Chronicles of Oklahoma 16:3 (September 1938)
  • Tolman, Keith. "Tea Kettle on a Raft: A History of Navigation on the Upper Red River," The Chronicles of Oklahoma 81 (Winter 2003-2004)
  • Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture - Shawnee Trail
  • Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture - California Road

External links

preston, texas, preston, also, known, preston, bend, citation, needed, unincorporated, community, census, designated, place, located, river, grayson, county, texas, united, states, grew, 19th, century, intersection, several, military, trade, roads, important, . Preston also known as Preston Bend citation needed is an unincorporated community and census designated place located on the Red River in Grayson County Texas United States It grew in the 19th century at the intersection of several military and trade roads and was an important crossing on the Shawnee cattle trail Preston lost prominence after the MK amp T railroad bypassed the town to the east leading to a decline in traveler and cattle drive traffic Much of its former town site is submerged beneath the waters of Lake Texoma Its population was 2 096 as of the 2010 census 1 Preston TexasCensus designated placeNickname Preston BendPrestonShow map of TexasPrestonShow map of the United StatesCoordinates 33 53 1 28 N 96 38 1 23 W 33 8836889 N 96 6336750 W 33 8836889 96 6336750CountryUnited StatesStateTexasCountyGraysonSettled1836Founded byHolland CoffeeSilas Cheek ColvilleArea Total8 1 sq mi 21 1 km2 Land5 1 sq mi 13 1 km2 Water3 1 sq mi 8 0 km2 Elevation708 ft 216 m Population 2010 Total2 096 Density416 sq mi 160 6 km2 Time zoneUTC 6 CST FIPS code48 59420GNIS feature ID1380395 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early settlement 1 2 Holland Coffee and the trading post 1 3 Roads and trails 1 4 Fort Preston 1 5 Glen Eden 1 6 The town 1 7 Cattle crossing 1 8 Ferries 1 9 Hopes for expansion 2 Decline 2 1 Butterfield trail 2 2 MK amp T Railroad 2 3 20th century 2 4 Lake Texoma 3 Demographics 3 1 2020 census 3 2 2000 census 4 Geography 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory Edit Preston in 1856Early settlement Edit Before European settlement the general area of Preston had been occupied by the Caddo people with the Comanche and Kiowa farther to the west One of the first American settlers in the area was John Hart who cultivated land at the bend in the Red River possibly before 1826 He left the area just after 1830 after being attacked by Indians during a trapping expedition on the Washita River 2 During the 1830s the United States relocated the Five Civilized Tribes from the Southeastern United States to the Indian Territory on the north side of the Red River As the first official United States expedition to the area the Dodge Leavenworth Expedition explored the region in 1834 Above Preston on the Red River Leavenworth Camp situated just west of the mouth of the Washita River 3 the area was a base for this expedition George Catlin made some of his famous Indian paintings from this camp 3 In the fall of 1838 John Hart returned to the Washita Bend area with two partners 2 4 They cleared and fenced 17 acres 69 000 m2 and built three cabins 2 In 1838 the partnership dissolved and Hart took sole possession of the land 2 He leased the land to a tenant 2 Holland Coffee and the trading post Edit Holland Coffee and Silas Cheek Colville created Coffee Colville and Company to establish a trading post on the Red River 5 After establishing three trading posts upstream they established one in the Washita Bend 6 7 They occupied the area of Washita Bend after John Hart s tenant was killed by Indians 2 Hart later sued Coffee for the land but lost 2 7 In 1837 Holland Coffee had been elected to the Texas Legislature 8 and negotiated a peace treaty between the Republic of Texas and the Waco Tawakoni Kichai and Towash Pawnee peoples on September 2 1838 at a Shawnee village near the mouth of the Washita River 9 10 The town of Preston grew up around the trading post established by Coffee and Colville 11 12 The Trading Post of Holland Coffee site received a historic marker in 1936 13 Roads and trails Edit Preston developed at the junction between the Indian Territory s Texas Road leading north to Missouri and what became the Preston Road leading south farther into Texas 11 Roughly following a much older trail used by Native Americans for centuries in 1840 1841 Colonel William Gordon Cooke created the military road from Coffee s trading house on the Red River to Austin 12 The Preston Road was originally 100 miles 160 km long from Preston to the Trinity River at Dallas 8 Fort Preston Edit The Republic of Texas commissioned Colonel Cooke to make a supply post in the area 12 known as Fort Preston after Captain William Gilwater Preston a member of the military road expedition of 1840 1841 Some doubt remains that the town was named after him and the origin of the name of the town is obscure 11 In 1840 Cooke was in charge of a company of men there 11 14 15 Coffee and other settlers were thinking about leaving the area before Cooke arrived 4 The village around Fort Preston grew up to be known as Preston Texas 14 Fort Preston was established 80 yards west of the eastern bend in the river on a bluff about 40 to 50 feet 12 to 15 m above the river 8 Some of the buildings at Fort Preston were made of bricks made in the area 8 Later the United States Army operated a depot to supply the Fifth Infantry from here 11 The Army depot operated from 1851 to 1853 12 The Preston Supply Depot was under the command of Lt Thomas C English and later by Bvt Maj W F Wood 11 Albert Sidney Johnston and the Second Cavalry came through Preston in 1855 11 Glen Eden Edit When Holland Coffee married Sophia Suttonfield Aughinbaugh in 1839 12 they resided at his trading post in a 100 foot 30 m square log stockade on the Red River 8 12 The stockade enclosed several huts and cabins 8 In 1843 Coffee began building Glen Eden as a proper house for his wife 2 miles 3 km west of his trading post 8 12 It was completed in 1845 15 Holland Coffee was killed on October 1 1846 11 Sophia later married several more times and Glen Eden became the most famous residence in the area The town Edit Preston developed in the area around Coffee s trading house and was a considerable town in 1845 when William H Hunt completed its town plat survey 8 11 12 The municipal government was established in 1851 with Tom Jackson as the first mayor 12 Preston s Masonic lodge was established in 1852 12 A United States post office was established in 1856 12 and later a post office operated from 1880 to 1914 11 Preston had general stores 11 and at least one blacksmith shop 16 Cattle crossing Edit As the cattle business developed in Texas and cattle trails to processing facilities in Kansas became necessary the Shawnee Trail developed through the Preston area The crossing had been an important wagon crossing before 1850 with over 1 000 wagons crossing there in a year 11 Ferries Edit Log raft ferry service was available at the trading post in 1839 4 Holland Coffee George Butts and Slone Love operated ferries in the area 11 Rock Bluff Ferry operated near the mouth of the Washita River close to Preston 3 In the late 1830s James Tyson operated the ferry at the rock bluff His ferry was little more than a log raft 14 Later two partners owned this ferry Jim Shannon and Bud Randolph 14 Around 1853 Ben Colbert opened up his ferry downstream to cash in on the California gold rush 14 Preston was located on one branch of the California Trail where it crossed into Texas from the Indian Territory 3 16 About 6 miles 10 km west of Colberts was Thompson s Ferry run by James George Thompson first chief justice in Grayson County Thompson s home became the first post office and courthouse in the county 8 Hopes for expansion Edit Supplying the military posts in the frontier area was difficult One idea was to expand and supply the army depot at Preston by steamboat This plan was abandoned in 1853 due to the difficulty of navigating the upper Red River because of the Great Raft logjam 17 Later after the destruction of the Great Raft steamboats on the Red River were finally able to navigate up the river to Preston 18 Preston had a steamboat landing 19 In 1847 the Texas Legislature ordered a road to be built from Preston to Sherman 8 In 1853 Congress funded an exploration of the best route west of the Mississippi for a transcontinental railroad In February 1854 an expedition of 75 men led by Capt John Pope surveyed a route along the 32nd parallel north from New Mexico to Preston Secretary of War Jefferson Davis favored this path though it was tabled until after the Civil War This route was afterwards abandoned 17 After the Civil War the First transcontinental railroad was surveyed and constructed farther to the north Decline EditAlthough Preston developed as the largest community in the area for many years several factors led to its decline When new counties were created by the Texas Legislature their county seats were located near the center of the counties After the Texas Legislature created Grayson County from Fannin County the county seat was designated near the center of the new county at Sherman As the county government developed the focus of growth left Preston The site of Sherman was situated east of the Preston Trail and caused travelers passing through the area from the north to the south to gravitate east of Preston Butterfield trail Edit Main article Butterfield Overland Mail The Butterfield Overland Mail stage route between St Louis and San Francisco began operation in 1857 The line ran across the Indian Territory from Fort Smith Arkansas to the Red River at Colbert s Ferry a few miles east of Preston The stage line had decided to bypass Preston as the traditional crossing on the Red River 4 Colbert s Ferry became a more popular crossing over the Red River as Sherman and McKinney developed 11 In 1857 Sherman was very small made up of only two or three small stores Much of the brick and material came from older buildings at Preston 8 By 1871 14 stage lines were operating through Sherman 4 MK amp T Railroad Edit Main article Missouri Kansas Texas Railroad After the Civil War the peace treaty between the United States and the Five Civilized Tribes allowed for a railroad to be built north and south across the Indian Territory This railroad the Missouri Kansas and Texas crossed the Red River near Colbert s Ferry to the east of Preston in 1871 By this time Preston had begun to decline and was largely abandoned 11 As other cities along the railroad s route prospered Preston became a rural community 12 20th century Edit Area around Preston in 1922In the 20th century Preston had a public school system two churches a cotton gin and a cemetery 12 In the 1930s the town had about 20 residents 12 New Preston developed more centrally within the bend 11 Lake Texoma Edit Main article Lake Texoma The United States Congress authorized Lake Texoma s construction by the Flood Control Act of 1938 approved June 28 1938 Public Law 75 791 for flood control and generation of hydroelectric power The lake s area submerged the Preston townsite The United States Army Corps of Engineers bought all the land in the area in the late 1930s for Lake Texoma 12 After the filling of Lake Texoma only the cemetery was left from Preston which was on high ground overlooking the town 12 The cemetery was expanded with a new section when Lake Texoma was created Some of the existing graves that were to be under the lake were moved to the new section of the cemetery Preston Point is the peninsula in Lake Texoma that was the high ground overlooking the town of Preston An unincorporated community named Preston exists on this peninsula consisting largely of campgrounds and recreational cabins Demographics Edit2020 census Edit Preston racial composition 20 NH Non Hispanic a Race Number PercentageWhite NH 1 845 87 82 Black or African American NH 6 0 29 Native American or Alaska Native NH 35 1 67 Asian NH 6 0 29 Pacific Islander NH 1 0 05 Some Other Race NH 6 0 29 Mixed Multi Racial NH 113 5 38 Hispanic or Latino 89 4 24 Total 2 101As of the 2020 United States census there were 2 101 people 834 households and 355 families residing in the CDP 2000 census Edit The population of Preston was 325 in 2000 11 Geography EditPreston was located in Texas on its border with the Indian Territory later the state of Oklahoma in the Red River Valley on a river bend just downstream from the river s confluence with the Washita River The area was also known as Washita Bend or Coffee Bend This area is located a few miles east of the Cross Timbers on the upper Red River above the former Great Raft logjam A rock bluff overlooked the Red River from the Texas side of the river 100 to 110 feet 30 to 34 m above the river s low water mark This bluff at Preston marked the ford of an old Indian trail on the Red River 23 This ford was later used as the Red River crossing point of the Shawnee Cattle Trail Later the bluff also marked the return route of Captain Randolph B Marcy s expedition from Santa Fe to Fort Smith in 1849 23 The Oklahoma side of the river was a relatively flat sand covered plain and terraces sloping gently to the river 24 The current Preston CDP occupies the entire Preston Peninsula bordered to the west by the main body of Lake Texoma and to the east by the Little Mineral Arm of the lake The peninsula ends to the north at Preston Point and the CDP extends south to the base of the peninsula at Meadow Lake Drive to the east and at Highport Road to the west Texas State Highway 289 has its northern terminus in Preston and leads south 7 miles 11 km to Pottsboro Denison is 14 miles 23 km to the southeast and Sherman the Grayson County seat is 20 miles 32 km to the south southeast According to the U S Census Bureau the Preston CDP has a total area of 8 1 square miles 21 1 km2 of which 5 1 square miles 13 1 km2 are land and 3 1 square miles 8 0 km2 or 38 02 are covered by water consisting of the adjoining waters of Lake Texoma References Edit Geographic Identifiers 2010 Demographic Profile Data G001 Preston CDP Texas American Factfinder U S Census Bureau Retrieved March 22 2017 dead link a b c d e f g Johnson John G Hart John TSHA Handbook of Texas Online Retrieved November 24 2008 a b c d Bryce J Y September 1930 Temporary Markers of Historic Points The Chronicles of Oklahoma Oklahoma Historical Society 8 3 282 290 Retrieved November 20 2008 a b c d e Erlichman Howard 2006 Camino Del Norte How a Series of Watering Holes Fords and Dirt Trails Evolved Into Interstate 35 in Texas Texas A amp M University Press p 284 ISBN 9781585444731 Britton Morris L Coffee s Station TSHA Handbook of Texas Online Retrieved January 6 2013 Britton Morris L Coffee Holland TSHA Handbook of Texas Online Retrieved January 6 2013 a b Britton Morris L Colville Silas Cheek TSHA Handbook of Texas Online Retrieved November 24 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k Petersen Paul 2007 Quantrill in Texas The Forgotten Campaign Cumberland House Publishing p 267 ISBN 9781581825824 Moore Stephen March 2006 Savage Frontier Rangers Riflemen and Indian Wars in Texas University of North Texas Press ISBN 9781574412055 DeShields James Bradley Matt 1912 Border Wars of Texas The Herald company pp 400 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Britton Morris L January 18 2008 Preston Tx Grayson County TSHA Handbook of Texas Online Retrieved November 20 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Baker T Lindsay 1991 Ghost Towns of Texas Norman Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press p 208 ISBN 9780806121895 Site of the Trading Post of Holland Coffee Marker Number 7349 Texas Historic Sites Atlas Texas Historical Commission 1936 a b c d e Gard Wayne 1984 The Chisholm Trail Norman Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press p 296 ISBN 9780806115368 a b Federal Writers Project Writers Program Tex Writers Program Texas 1940 Texas A Guide to the Lone Star State US History Publishers p 718 ISBN 9781603540421 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Morrison W B June 1927 Fort Washita The Chronicles of Oklahoma 5 2 Archived from the original on July 23 2008 Retrieved November 20 2008 a b Smith Thomas 1999 The U S Army and the Texas Frontier Economy 1845 1900 Texas A amp M University Press p 307 ISBN 9780890968826 Tolman Keith Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Steamboats and Landings Retrieved November 20 2008 Wright Muriel March 1930 Early Navigation and Commerce along the Arkansas and Red Rivers in Oklahoma The Chronicles of Oklahoma 8 1 65 88 Explore Census Data data census gov Retrieved May 22 2022 https www census gov not specific enough to verify About the Hispanic Population and its Origin www census gov Retrieved May 18 2022 a b Wright Muriel June 1933 Historic Places on the Old Stage Line from Fort Smith to Red River The Chronicles of Oklahoma 11 2 798 822 Survey Oklahoma Geological 1917 Oklahoma Geological Survey Bulletin Number 19 Norman Oklahoma Note the US Census treats Hispanic Latino as an ethnic category This table excludes Latinos from the racial categories and assigns them to a separate category Hispanics Latinos can be of any race 21 22 Further reading EditForeman Grant Down the Texas Road Historic Places Along Highway Number 69 Through Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press 1936 Pp 46 Landrum Grahm and Smith Allen Grayson County Fort Worth 1960 2d ed Fort Worth Historical Publishers 1967 Lucas Mattie D and Hall Mita H A History of Grayson County Sherman Texas 1936 Marcy R B The Prairie Traveler unknown date publisher Middlebrooks Audy J and Glenna P Holland Coffee of Red River Southwestern Historical Quarterly 69 October 1965 Morrison W B Colbert Ferry on Red River Chickasaw Nation Indian Territory The Chronicles of Oklahoma 16 3 September 1938 Tolman Keith Tea Kettle on a Raft A History of Navigation on the Upper Red River The Chronicles of Oklahoma 81 Winter 2003 2004 Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Shawnee Trail Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture California RoadExternal links EditPreston TX from the Handbook of Texas Online Preston at GhostTowns com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Preston Texas amp oldid 1165231607, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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