Texoma Museums

From early settlements and trading post, Texoma has emerged as a major cultural, educational, recreational, industrial, and economic center. Take a peek into the journey of this transformation by visiting area museums, cultural centers, and villages.  Texoma museums contain collections of memorabilia from Jazz to World War II and beyond.  Must visit recommendations are the Railroad Museum, Eisenhower Birthplace, Perrin Field and The Sherman Museum.

Fannin County Museum of History
Business Address
1 N. Main Street, Bonham, TX 75418
Phone
903.583.8042 Group Tours: 903-583-5558
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Fannin County Museum of History picks up the story of Fannin County shortly before the Texas Revolution when Dr. Daniel Rowlett introduced the first twelve families as permanent settlers to the area

Frontier Village
Business Address
111 RC Vaughn Road, Exit 67 Hwy 75
Denison, Texas 75020
Phone
(903) 463-2487
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Come visit Grayson County's oldest and most historic homes and structures, cared for and restored by a dedicated group of volunteers and history enthusiast. Frontier Village and Museum sits on 14 acres along U.S. 75 inside Loy Park between Sherman and Denison, Texas preserving the log cabins and homes of the pioneers who settled in Grayson County in the nineteenth century. Through the years, the village has added nine more pioneer homes, a large collection old mule-drawn farm implements and several other buildings house items of historical interest. Five of the home in the village have Texas Historical Markers. Many historical items are housed in the museum. Frontier Village and Museum is open to the public daily (except Tuesday) and regularly holds demonstrations of the early pioneers living as well as craft events and festivals.

Fort Inglish Village
Business Address
Located 1.5 Miles West of Bonham on Hwy. 56 Bonham, TX
Phone
903.583.3943
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Bailey Inglish, founder of Bonham, brought the first settlers to claim homesteads on the rich black land of the Red River Valley in the central part of what was to become Fannin County, in March 1837.