
Our Killeen logo carries Texas's longhorn and Lone Star, drawn in worn black and white above ‘Texas Republic — Est. 1845,’ the shared retro emblem of our Texas towns. The longhorn stands for ranching toughness and the star for the Lone Star State, and the 1845 date marks Texas statehood; the emblem is the through-line that links Killeen to every other Texas town we make. The cavalry's Stetson-and-spurs tradition rhymes with it almost exactly — same hat, same boots, same hard country. What makes this one Killeen is the post at its gate and the horses still drilling behind it.
Today Killeen is a young, diverse army town in the heart of central Texas — home to soldiers, veterans, and a large Korean-American community whose ties reach back through Fort Hood's long rotations to Korea. Its days mix lakeside afternoons and museum mornings with the rhythm of a working post, all under the same Texas sky the cavalry rode out under. Our Killeen designs gather that into wearable form. Wear the history. The last of the cavalry still rides.
Why People Visit Killeen
Killeen balances military storylines with relaxed outdoor time. Visitors pair the cavalry museum and the mounted drill with lakeside picnics and easy park days, then round it off with a Korean meal in one of the city's many family-run spots. It is practical, family-friendly, and close to the water, with year-round appeal in its parks, paths, and public spaces. History and everyday culture sit side by side here in a welcoming way.