Paris, Texas is a city and county seat of Lamar County, Texas, United States. As of the 2010 census, the population of the city was 25,171. It is situated in Northeast Texas at the western edge of the Piney Woods, and 98 miles (158 km) northeast of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. Physiographically, these regions are part of the West Gulf Coastal Plain.
Following a tradition of American cities named "Paris", the city commissioned a 65-foot (20 m) replica of the Eiffel Tower in 1993 and installed it on site of the Love Civic Center, southeast of the town square. In 1998, presumably as a response to the 1993 construction of a 60-foot (18 m) tower in Paris, Tennessee, the city placed a giant red cowboy hat atop its tower. The current tower is at least the second Eiffel Tower replica built in Paris; the first was constructed of wood and later destroyed by a tornado.
Video Paris, Texas
History
The first recorded settlers in the area came in 1826, although settlers were known to have been in the area as early as 1824. The first settlements were west of Jonesborough and Clarksville. The settlement on the Red River was named Fulton. Another developed at what is now called Emberson. A third settlement was located southeast of the present-day North Lamar school complex. A fourth settlement, Pin Hook, developed southwest of that at the Chisum-Johnson community. Another group of pioneers settled to the east at Moore's Springs.
In late 1839, George Washington Wright moved from his farm northeast of Clarksville to a hill where he had purchased 1,000 acres of unoccupied land. It was on the old road from the mouth of the Kiomatia River at its confluence with the Red River to Grand Prairie. Wright opened a general store on the road. By September 1841, Wright's store was called "Paris" and served as the local postal office.
Present-day Lamar County was part of Red River County during the Republic of Texas. By 1840, population growth necessitated the organization of a new county. Wright, who had served in the Third Congress of the Republic of Texas as a representative from Red River County, was a major proponent of the new county. The Fifth Congress established the new county on December 17, 1840, and named it after Mirabeau B. Lamar, who was the first vice president and the second president of the Republic of Texas. Lamar County was organized by elections held on February 1, 1841. The county included much of what became Delta County in 1870, when Lamar County was reduced to its current size.
The original county seat was LaFayette, a small settlement several miles northwest of present-day Paris. On June 22, 1841, John Watson donated forty acres of land to develop a new county seat. The town was platted, but no lots were sold, and the county court continued to meet at LaFayette. In 1842, the Congress of the Republic of Texas passed a law requiring each county seat to be within five miles of the geographic center of the county. Accordingly, Mount Vernon was made the seat of Lamar County in 1843, but no courthouse was ever built there.
The following year, Wright offered to donate fifty acres for a town, on the condition that the county commissioners make the town the county seat. The commissioners accepted the offer in August 1844 and named the town "Paris." The first term of the county court was held there on April 29, 1844. Paris was incorporated by the Tenth Congress of the Republic of Texas on February 3, 1845.
Paris was on the Central National Road of the Republic of Texas, which went from San Antonio through Paris and then across the Red River.
At the start of the Civil War, Paris had 700 residents and was a center of trade for cattle and farming. It also was the site of the first municipally-owned and -operated abattoir in the U.S. Lamar County was one of the 18 Texas counties that voted against secession on February 23, 1861, although many of its residents later served in the Confederate Army.
In 1877, 1896, and 1916, major fires in the city forced considerable rebuilding. The 1916 fire destroyed almost half the town and caused an estimated $11 million in property damage. The fire ruined most of the central business district and swept through a residential area. The burned structures included the Federal Building and Post Office, the Lamar County Courthouse and Jail, City Hall, most commercial buildings, and several churches. The fire started around 5 p.m. on March 21. The exact cause is unknown. Winds estimated at 50 miles per hour fanned the flames, which were visible for up to forty miles away. The fire was brought under control on the morning of March 22 by firefighters from Paris and surrounding areas, including Hugo, Oklahoma.
In 1893, black teenager Henry Smith was accused of murder, tortured, and then burned to death on a scaffold in front of thousands of spectators in Paris. In 1920, two black brothers from the Arthur family were tied to a flagpole and burned to death at the Paris fairgrounds. The city has prominent memorials to the Confederacy but has no acknowledgement of these killings.
In 1943, the U.S. Supreme Court in Largent v. Texas struck down a Paris ordinance that prohibited a person from selling or distributing religious publications without first obtaining a city-issud permit. The Court ruled that the ordinance abridged freedom of religion, freedom of speech, and freedom of the press in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Eiffel Tower replica
Fifteen American municipalities are named "Paris;" many have erected replicas of the Eiffel Tower to pay homage to the city of Paris, France.
Both Paris of Texas and Paris, Tennessee built Eiffel Tower replicas in 1993: Tennessee's was built at Christian Brothers University (in Memphis) and was 60 feet tall; the one in Texas was built by the Boilermakers 902, a labor union representing workers of the former Babcock & Wilcox Paris Plant, and was 65 feet tall. In 1998 when Tennessee moved its tower to their city of Paris, they heightened it to 70 feet. Paris, Texas, claimed to be "The second largest Paris in the World." In 1998 town boosters added a large red cowboy hat to the top of the tower, making it taller than Tennessee's replica.
In 1999, Las Vegas erected a 540-foot-tall Eiffel Tower replica along the Strip. At half the height of the original (which is 984 feet tall), this Eiffel Tower is nearly ten times taller than the other replicas.
Transportation
Paris has long been a railroad center. The Texas and Pacific reached town in 1876; the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway (later merged into the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway) and the St. Louis - San Francisco Railway in 1887; the Texas Midland Railroad (later Southern Pacific) in 1894; and the Paris and Mount Pleasant (Pa-Ma Line) in 1910. Paris Union Station, built 1912, served Frisco, Santa Fe and Texas Midland passenger trains until 1956. Today, the station is used by the Lamar County Chamber of Commerce and serves as the research library for the Lamar County Genealogical Society.
Historical residences
The city is home to several late 19th century to mid-20th century stately homes. Among these is the Rufus Fenner Scott Mansion, designed by German architect J.L. Wees and constructed in 1910. The structure is solid concrete and steel with four floors. Rufus Scott was a prominent businessman known for shipping, imports, and banking. He was well known by local farmers who bought aging transport mules from him. The Scott Mansion narrowly survived the fire of 1916. After the fire, Scott brought the architect Wees back to Paris to redesign the historic downtown area.
In the early 1930s, Rufus Scott died, and his property was purchased by Gene Roden, who converted the house to a funeral home. It was the first funeral home in northeast Texas to have its own chapel. The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. On April 1, 2006, Gene Roden's Sons Funeral Home was sold to Arvin Starrett and E. Casey Rose (who was managing the firm at the time) and the name was changed to Starrett-Rose Funeral Home. In March 2007, Casey Rose sold his 50% interest in the firm to Arvin Starrett and the name became Starrett Funeral Home.
The recently restored home of William Belford Wise was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988. The property is an example of late Victorian Queen Anne style architecture in masonry.
Paris Junior College
Paris Junior College was established in 1924. In 1990, it was one of the oldest junior colleges in Texas. Its main campus had 20 buildings, including a new $1.1 million physical education center, and the college offered both technical and academic instruction.
Its jewelry technologies department, now known as The Texas Institute of Jewelry Technology at Paris Junior College, is internationally recognized as one of the premier jewelry schools in the world.
Paris Junior College Dragon's Men's basketball team won the NJCAA national championship in 2005. In 1959, the baseball team won the first NJCAA national championship in Grand Junction, Colorado. During the 1960s through the 1980s, the school boasted nationally ranked men's Tennis programs. Paris Junior College has a new women's dormitory that opened up in fall of 2012, along with a new multimillion Science and Mathematics building that opened in the spring of 2013. The college has three campuses in Texas: the main one in Paris, a large campus in Sulphur Springs, and another in Greenville. Enrollment was expected to surpass 5,000 students in 2013.
Camp Maxey
From 1942 to 1945, the US Army operated Camp Maxey, 10 miles (16 km) north of Paris. During World War II, Camp Maxey had an area of 36,683 acres (14,845.08 Hectares), and billeting space for 2,022 officers, and 42,515 enlisted personnel.
The camp served as an infantry-division training camp. It was named in honor of Samuel Bell Maxey, a major general for the Confederacy in the American Civil War and later elected from Texas to the U.S. Senate. The camp was activated on July 15, 1942, and deactivated October 1, 1945. It also served as an internment center for many German prisoners of war.
In the 21st century, Camp Maxey is maintained by a Texas Army National Guard unit, who regularly conduct training exercises. The Camp is garrisoned normally by a force of 10 men. Civil Air Patrol's Texas Wing also regularly uses the camp for training events.
In June 2008, when word came that over 600 American service personnel were coming to receive training for the war in Iraq, residents of the city of Paris adopted them. They donated what they thought the troops would need in order to enjoy their time in Paris before being sent to the war.
City rating
Paris was named the "Best Small Town in Texas" by Kevin Heubusch in his book The New Rating Guide to Life in America's Small Cities (1997).
Media
Newspaper
Since 1869, The Paris News has served as the newspaper in the city of Paris. It circulates daily in the city and throughout Lamar County as well as in neighboring Delta County, Fannin County, Red River County and Choctaw County, Oklahoma.
Radio stations
Five radio stations are licensed in the city of Paris: KZHN, KPLT (AM), KOYN, KBUS, and KPLT-FM.
Television
Paris is served by KXII; the low-power translator station KXIP-LD (channel 12) is in Paris.
Maps Paris, Texas
Race relations
Paris is deeply segregated and race relations in Paris have a bloody history and are deeply polarized, turbulent, and sometimes explosive.
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, several lynchings were staged at the Paris Fairgrounds as public spectacles, with thousands of white spectators cheering as the victims were tortured and then immolated, dismembered, or otherwise murdered. Among the victims were Henry Smith, a teenager lynched in 1893.
115 years later, in 2008, an African-American man, Brandon McClelland, was run over and dragged to death under a vehicle. Two white men were arrested, but the prosecutor cited lack of evidence and declined to press charges, and no serious subsequent attempt to find other perpetrators was made. This caused unrest in the Paris African-American community.
Following this incident, an attempt by the United States Department of Justice Justice Community Relations Service to initiate a dialog between the races in the town ended in failure when African-American complaints were mostly met by silent glares.
A 2009 protest rally over the case led to Texas State Police intervention to prevent groups shouting "white power!" and "black power!" from coming to blows.
In 2007, a 14-year-old African-American girl was sentenced by a local judge to up to 7 years in a youth prison for shoving a hall monitor at Paris High School. Three months earlier, the same judge had sentenced a 14-year-old white girl to probation for arson. This sentencing disparity occasioned nationwide controversy and the African-American girl was released after serving one year on orders of a special conservator appointed by the State of Texas to investigate problems with the state's juvenile justice practices.
In 2009, some African-American workers at the Turner Industries plant in the city claimed that hangman's nooses, Confederate flags and racist graffiti were regular features of plant culture. At the same time, the United States Department of Education was conducting an investigation into allegations that African-American students in Paris's schools are disciplined more harshly than white students for similar offenses.
In 2015, the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ruled after an investigation that African-American workers at the Sara Lee Corporation plant in Paris (closed in 2011) were deliberately disproportionately exposed to asbestos, black mold, and other toxins, and also were targets of racial slurs and racist graffiti.
Some Paris residents deny that the town has a race relations problem.
Geography
Paris is located at 33°39?45?N 95°32?52?W (33.662508, -95.547692). According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 44.4 square miles (115 km2), of which 42.8 square miles (111 km2) is land and 1.7 square miles (4.4 km2) (3.74%) is water.
Climate
Paris has a humid subtropical climate (Cfa in the Köppen climate classification). It is located in "Tornado Alley", an area largely centered in the middle of the United States in which tornadoes occur frequently because of weather patterns and geography. Paris is in USDA plant hardiness zone 8a for winter temperatures. This is cooler than its southern neighbor Dallas, and while similar to Atlanta, Georgia, it has warmer summertime temperatures. Summertime average highs reach 94 F and 95 °F (35 °C) in July and August, with associated lows of 72 and 71. Winter temperatures drop to an average high of 51 and low of 30 in January. The highest temperature on record was 115, set in August 1936, and the record low was -5, set in 1930. Average precipitation is 47.82 inches (1,215 mm). Snow is not unusual, but is by no means predictable, and years can pass with no snowfall at all.
On April 2, 1982, Paris was hit by an F4 tornado that destroyed more than 1,500 homes, left ten people dead, 170 injured and 3,000 homeless. The damage toll from this tornado was estimated at 50 million USD in 1982.
Demographics
As of the 2010 United States Census, there were 25,171 people. As of the census of 2010, there were 25,171 people, 10,306 households, and 6,426 families residing in the city. The population density was 588.1 people per square mile (227.4/km²). There were 11,883 housing units at an average density of 277.6 per square mile (107.3/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 70.3% White, 24.8% African American, 3.1% Native American, 1.1% Asian, 0.1% Pacific Islander, and 4.0% from other races. Hispanic or Latino people of any race were 8.2% of the population.
There were 10,306 households, of which 27.6% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 37.8% were married couples living together, 19.6% had a female householder with no husband present, and 37.6% are classified as non-families by the United States Census Bureau. 32.8% of all households were made up of individuals and 15.2% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.38 and the average family size was 3.01.
In the city, the population was spread out with 25.0% under the age of 18, 10.6% from 18 to 24, 24.1% from 25 to 44, 23.8% from 45 to 64, and 16.6% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 37.1 years. For every 100 females there were 87.3 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 82.9 males.
2000 census data
The median income for a household in the city was $27,438, and the median income for a family was $34,916. Males had a median income of $29,378 versus $20,080 for females. The per capita income for the city was $17,137. About 16.5% of families and 20.6% of the population were below the poverty line, including 29.0% of those under age 18 and 15.9% of those age 65 or over.
Economy
In the past, Paris was a major cotton exchange, and the county was developed as cotton plantations. While cotton is still farmed on the lands around Paris, it is no longer a major part of the economy.
Paris' one major hospital has two campuses: Paris Regional Medical Center South (formerly St. Joseph's Hospital) and Paris Regional Medical Center North (formerly McCuistion Regional Medical Center). It serves as the center of healthcare for much of Northeast Texas and Southeast Oklahoma. Both campuses are now operated jointly under the name of the Paris Regional Medical Center, a division of Essent Healthcare. The health network is one of the largest employers in the Paris area.
Outside of healthcare, the largest employers are Kimberly-Clark, and Campbell's Soup.
Note: PRMC is Paris Regional Medical Center.
Education
Elementary and secondary education is split among three main school districts:
- Paris Independent School District
- North Lamar Independent School District
- Chisum Independent School District
Prairiland ISD also serves a small portion of the town along with Blossom ISD, as well as Roxton ISD, respectively.
In addition, Paris Junior College provides post-secondary education. It hosts the Texas Institute of Jewelry Technology, a well-respected school of gemology, horology, and jewelry. The Industrial Technology Division offers programs in air conditioning technology, refrigeration technology, agricultural technology, drafting and computer-aided design, electronics, electromechanical technology, and welding technology.
Texas A&M University-Commerce, a major university of over 12,000 students, is located in the neighboring city of Commerce, 40 minutes southwest of Paris.
The Paris Public Library serves Paris, as does the Lamar County Genealogical Society Library.
Government
It is governed by a city council as specified in the city's charter adopted in 1948.
State government
Paris is represented in the Texas Senate by Republican Kevin Eltife, District 1, and in the Texas House of Representatives by Republican Erwin Cain, District 3.
The Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) operates the Paris District Parole Office in Paris.
Federal government
At the Federal level, the two U.S. Senators from Texas are Republicans John Cornyn and Ted Cruz. Paris is part of Texas's 4th congressional district, represented by Republican John Ratcliffe.
The United States Postal Service operates the Paris Post Office.
Transportation
Major highways
- U.S. Highway 82
- U.S. Highway 271
- State Highway 19/State Highway 24
- State Highway Loop 286
According to the Texas Transportation Commission, Paris is the second-largest city in Texas without a four-lane divided highway connecting to an Interstate highway within the state. However, those traveling north of the city can go into the Midwest on a four-lane thoroughfare via US 271 across the Red River into Oklahoma, and then the Indian Nation Turnpike from Hugo to Interstate 40 at Henryetta, which in turn continues as a free four-lane highway via US 75 to Tulsa.
Paris is served by two taxicab companies. Cox Field provides general aviation services.
Attractions
- Pat Mayse Lake
- Lake Crook
- St. Paul Baptist Church - Founded in 1867 by former slave Elijah Barnes, it was among independent black Baptist congregations which freedmen quickly set up after the Civil War. Most of them left the Southern Baptist Convention, creating their own associations. This is registered at the state and federal level as the second-oldest African-American Baptist church in the state. The current pastor is Kenneth Rogers.
- Central Presbyterian Church - Founded in 1844, it was the first church formed in Lamar County. It has historic stained glass windows and is historically registered at the state and federal levels
- Beaver's Bend Resort Park (Oklahoma)
- Evergreen Cemetery - Located on the south side of town, there are over 50,000 people interred. This is the site of a noted 12-foot (3.7 m) tall "Jesus with cowboy boots" statue and grave marker, as well as the resting place of banker/philanthropist William J. McDonald, Confederate General/U.S. Senator Sam Bell Maxey, rancher Pitts Chisum, and cotton magnate John J. Culbertson. Pitts Chisum's more famous brother, John Chisum, is also buried in the city.
- Sam Bell Maxey House - Maxey was a planter and Confederate general.
- Culbertson Fountain
- Bywaters Park
- Pine Branch Daylily Farm - breeding and selling of over 1,000 registered varieties.
- Paris Eiffel Tower
- Restored County Courthouse and its lawn with monuments
- Downtown restored 1918 period buildings
- Trail de Paris - multi-use recreational facility along abandoned railroad corridor
- Record Park
- Public Pool & Bath House
- The second Saturday of every October amateur radio enthusiasts (ham radio operators) come to the city in large numbers to attend the annual Paris, Texas Hamfest.
- On October 4, 1955, early in his career, Elvis Presley performed at the Boys Club Gymnasium at 1530 1st Street Northeast in Paris as a member of the Louisiana Hayride Jamboree tour.
- Annual Paris Art Fair sponsored by the YWCA Paris and Lamar County
- Each July the Tour de Paris, a bicycle tour, brings many tourists, both American and European.
- Lamar County Historical Museum
Representation in other media
- The film Paris, Texas (1984), by German director Wim Wenders, was named after the city, but was not set there.
- In the Wizards of Waverly Place episode "Retest", Max accidentally sends them to Paris, Texas, instead of Paris, France.
- Featured in the music video of Paris in the Rain by Lauv.
Notable people
References
External links
Media related to Paris, Texas at Wikimedia Commons
- City of Paris
- Paris Texas Event Calendar
- Lamar County Historical Society
- Lamar County Courthouse
- Handbook of Texas Online entry
- Paris Texas information - Lamar County Station
Source of the article : Wikipedia