
Frisco is named for a railroad. In 1902 the St. Louis–San Francisco Railway — “the Frisco” — laid a line across the prairie, and because its steam locomotives needed water, the crews built a watering stop on low ground a few miles west of Lebanon. A town gathered around the stop, and some Lebanon families are said to have rolled their houses over to it on logs. They first called the place Emerson, but the post office rejected the name, so they named it for the railway that had made it — Frisco City, soon shortened to Frisco. The old water tower on the original downtown still stands for that beginning, a landmark from the days when the train stopped for water. The railroad’s grand name outran its reach — the Frisco never actually got to San Francisco, stopping far short in the Southwest — but the borrowed name stuck to the little Texas town for good.
Our Frisco logo carries the Texas longhorn and Lone Star over “Texas Republic · Est. 1845,” the year Texas joined the Union — the shared emblem of every Merlin Classics Texas place. Here the longhorn is more than decoration: Frisco grew up on the Shawnee Trail, the very road those cattle were driven up. Printed in a distressed black-and-white that reads like an old brand iron, the longhorn is Texas in shorthand — and what makes this one Frisco is the country behind it: the cattle trail, the railroad name, and the boomtown that rose from the prairie.
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.