
Truman's lore keeps the milk-bottle christening story alive, retold beside coffee cups and reunion tables across the corner of Mesquite where North Galloway meets U.S. 80. Old-timers trade nicknames for the earlier settlements, recall hitching rides to the Mesquite square, and list the cafes that made a perfect pie. Storm talk returns each spring — hail dimpling hoods, creek water over culverts, and neighbors sweeping glass before church. Highway memories include roadside star cards, state trooper warnings, and hot tar under August sun. Myth and memory mingle in small gestures: a borrowed jack, a spare plug, a phone on the counter. The lesson is endurance plus humor, mile by mile.
Truman, Texas, began as a small East Dallas County stop along the old U.S. Highway 80 corridor — a crossroads of farms, creeks, and wagon traces on the prairie edge east of Dallas. The earlier names — Thin Gravy, Deanville, North Mesquite, and Mesquite Tap — hinted at humor, settlers, and rail sidings before the pavement came through. Families worked cotton and truck patches, traded at crossroads stores, and watched Dallas's growth approach from the west. After the wartime years, local identity sharpened around a renamed signboard and a sense of being seen. The place's founding character blended modest acreage, roadside commerce, and neighborly ritual along a hard-traveled highway shoulder.
Why People Visit Truman Texas
- Drive the old U.S. Highway 80 corridor through Truman Heights — the federal highway along which the November 21, 1945 christening took place, today the southern boundary of the neighborhood that carries the Truman name.
- Walk the Truman Heights corner — North Galloway Avenue at U.S. 80, Hillcrest Street at the western edge, Hillview Drive and Stephenson Drive through the interior. A pocket of postwar Mesquite at the spot where the milk bottle broke the sign.
- Tour Opal Lawrence Historical Park — the preserved Mesquite farmstead with National Register and Recorded Texas Historic Landmark status, the older prairie heritage that the U.S. 80 era grew out of.
- Visit Florence Ranch Homestead — the 1871 ranch homestead that anchors the pre-Truman East Dallas County prairie story.
- Walk historic downtown Mesquite around Front Street — the older Mesquite core a short drive from Truman Heights, with marker history including the 1878 Sam Bass train robbery commemoration on the larger Mesquite story that surrounds the smaller Truman one.
- Stop at Mesquite Arena — the rodeo and concert venue that anchors Mesquite's modern identity, near Rodeo Center Boulevard within a mile of Truman Heights.
- Visit Mesquite city facilities — City Lake Park, Paschall Park, the Florence Recreation Center — for the rec-center rhythm that fills neighborhood weekends.
- Run errands along Gus Thomasson Road, Gross Road, and North Town East Boulevard — the practical corridors that thread Truman Heights into the larger Mesquite map.
- Take a short drive west on U.S. 80 / I-30 into Dallas for the museum and restaurant scene — Truman Heights keeps the small-town corner; Dallas is one highway turn away.