
What turned a farm settlement into a town was the railroad. When the Houston & Texas Central Railway reached Plano in 1872, it connected the Blackland farms to distant cotton and grain markets and made the town Collin County's commercial hub almost overnight; warehouses, gins, and a depot rose where there had been open prairie. Plano incorporated on June 2, 1873, with C.J.E. Kellner as its first mayor. For the rest of the century it grew as a cotton, wheat, and milling center — a busy little market town shipping the prairie's harvest out to the wider world under a very big Texas sky.
Then, in 1881, fire nearly ended it. A blaze tore through the wooden downtown and destroyed all fifty-one of its business structures — only one survived. Rather than fold, Plano rebuilt in brick, and that decision is why Historic Downtown Plano still stands today, its oldest brick buildings dating to the 1890s. The rebuilt main street, the 1884 Schimelpfenig dry-goods building among its survivors, is a record in masonry of a town that refused to disappear.
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.