
The land was Blackland Prairie long before it was a town — a stretch of Collin County that drew settlers under the Peters' Colony land grants of the Republic of Texas. Families from Kentucky, Tennessee, and across the older South arrived in 1845 and 1846, breaking the tough prairie sod for wheat, corn, and cattle, and William Foreman put up a sawmill and gristmill that became the settlement's nucleus. The frontier era that opened the prairie to these farms also displaced the Native peoples who had long lived across North Texas, a hard fact of the period. A post office came around 1852, and the first physician, Dr. Henry Dye, is credited with proposing the name that stuck: plano, for the flat country all around.
The prairie's grandest survivor sits a little west of downtown. In 1891 the Farrell family built a fourteen-room Victorian farmhouse — elaborate jigsaw trim, a windmill, barns, a blacksmith shop, a henhouse, and a country store — on a working ranch, the same year Plano organized its public school system. For decades the place was a sheep operation; 'Miss Ammie' Wilson, a champion sheep breeder, ran it into the 1970s and left it to the public rather than the developers. Today it survives as the Heritage Farmstead Museum, an accredited living-history site where the windmill still turns and the Blackland Prairie story is kept alive, room by restored room — a working farm preserved whole inside a modern metropolis.
Why People Visit Plano
Plano rewards visitors who want Texas history without the crowds of a tourist town — a genuine 1891 farmstead, a brick Main Street rebuilt after the great fire, an electric-railway museum, and nature preserves on the old Blackland Prairie. People come for the Heritage Farmstead and the downtown arts district, for the September balloons over the prairie, and for an easy, welcoming North-Texas day with real roots behind it.