
Our McKinney logo carries the Texas longhorn above ‘Texas Republic — Est. 1845,’ the shared retro emblem of our Texas towns; the longhorn stands for the cattle-and-frontier heritage and the star for the Lone Star, and 1845 marks the year Texas joined the Union. Rendered in black-and-white, like an old cattle brand or rodeo poster, it ties McKinney to every other Texas town we make. What makes this one McKinney is the town behind the brand — the square, the 1875 courthouse, and the man who helped sign Texas into being.
The courthouse is the heart of the square. Built in 1875 by the architect Charles Wheelock in the French Second Empire style — a steep mansard roof, twin towers, decorative cut stone — it was said at completion to be the tallest building in Texas north of San Antonio. It was drastically remodeled in 1927, vacated in 1979, and then carefully restored: in 2006 it reopened as the McKinney Performing Arts Center, with the old courtroom, judge's bench and jury box intact, now a stage. When it first opened in 1876, a thousand locals came for a buffet dinner and a dance that ran past dawn.
Why People Visit McKinney
Visitors choose McKinney for its handsome square, approachable museums, and easy walkability. It balances small-city heritage with everyday outdoor spaces, from the courthouse and Chestnut Square to the Heard sanctuary and the park trails. Families and day-trippers find a friendly layout and an unhurried pace, with year-round appeal in its parks, paths, and public spaces — and the historic square always at the center of it.