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Mesquite Texas Vintage Retro Unisex Heavy Crewneck Sweatshirt - Black Logo

Mesquite Texas Vintage Retro Unisex Heavy Crewneck Sweatshirt - Black Logo

Regular price $38.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $38.00 USD
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Unisex heavy crewneck sweatshirt in medium-heavy fleece for warmth and durability. Classic fit with ribbed collar, cuffs & waistband, double-needle seams, and a tear-away label. DTG print. Standard 50% cotton/50% polyester; Heather Sport 60/40. White may appear off-white; Orange hue may vary.

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The Blackland Prairie here was long a gathering ground — Caddo, Tawakoni, and Wichita peoples held trading fairs across this part of North Texas. The town itself begins in May 1873, when the Texas & Pacific Railway built a depot on the line east of Dallas and named it for nearby Mesquite Creek. A post office followed in 1874, the first church in 1877, and on December 3, 1887 Mesquite incorporated. It was cotton country at first — gins and farms on the flat prairie — with the railroad running straight into the Dallas markets.

For its first seventy-five years Mesquite stayed small — fewer than 1,700 people as late as 1950. Then the Metroplex arrived: the postwar boom and the highways turned the cotton town into a major Dallas suburb, and the population climbed past 150,000. Through all of it, one identity stuck and became official — the Rodeo Capital of Texas. Since 1958 the Mesquite Championship Rodeo has run at what's now Resistol Arena, the chutes banging open on summer Saturday nights, keeping the town's Western character alive long after the cotton gins closed.

Why People Visit Mesquite Texas

Most people know Mesquite for the rodeo and the shopping, but the city rewards anyone who looks for the older layer: a Texas & Pacific depot town from 1873, the site of a Sam Bass train robbery, and the official Rodeo Capital of Texas. It's flat, friendly North Texas — Dallas-close, but holding onto its own railroad-and-rodeo character.

Mesquite Texas Merlin Classics retro vintage logo featuring a Texas longhorn and Lone Star over Texas Republic Est. 1845