
For all that tropical ease, McAllen is a young city raised on old ranchland. Long before the town this was Coahuiltecan homeland, and then Spanish-grant country: the Santa Anita Ranch traces to a 1797 land grant held for generations by the Ballí family. The modern story starts with John McAllen, an Irish-born rancher from Londonderry who reached the Valley in the mid-1800s, married into the Ballí-Young ranching family, and lent the place his name. When the St. Louis, Brownsville and Mexico Railway pushed through the brush country in 1904, a townsite was platted along the line and called McAllen; it incorporated as a city in 1911. A ranch, a railroad, and a name — that is how McAllen began.
And then there is the river. McAllen sits on the north bank of the Rio Grande, and the Valley it anchors is genuinely one place living under two flags — McAllen on the Texas side, Reynosa just across the water, joined by international bridges and by family, food, music, and trade that cross daily in both directions. It is a bilingual, bicultural city where Tejano roots run deep and the kitchen, the language, and the calendar all belong to the borderland. The river is a line on a map; the Valley does not treat it as much of a divider.
Why People Visit McAllen
McAllen offers something rare — a subtropical Texas city where world-class birding, citrus country, and a living bi-national culture all sit within easy reach. Visitors come for the palms and the birds, stay for the food and the warmth, and leave understanding why this corner of Texas calls itself the City of Palms.