
Today Frisco is one of the youngest big cities in Texas — a boomtown that kept the longhorn trail in its bones and the railroad in its name. Our Frisco designs gather that identity — the longhorn-and-star, the Frisco line, the water tower, the prairie that became a city — into wearable form. Frisco, Texas — from a railroad watering stop to a boomtown, in a single lifetime.
For its first half-century Frisco stayed small. It incorporated in 1908 and settled into the rhythm of a North Texas farm town — cotton gins and grain elevators, corn and cattle, a few hundred people through the Depression and into the postwar years. As late as 1960 the whole town was barely a thousand people. The railroad had named it and fed it, but the markets and the growth were always down the line in Dallas.
Why People Visit Frisco
Frisco offers a rare mix — a brand-new big city with deep-Texas roots: a railroad-heritage downtown, the old cattle trail underfoot, and a skyline of stadiums and corporate campuses that went up in a single generation. It's polished, easy to navigate, and unmistakably North Texas.