COLLIN COUNTY PEOPLE OF
NOTE & SOME WHO PASSED THROUGH
COLLIN COUNTY PEOPLE OF NOTE
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John Abston, only Revolutionary
War veteran buried in north Texas.
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Rebekah Baines, born in McKinney,
mother of Lyndon Baines Johnson.
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Haystack Calhoun, famous
professional wrestler in the 1950s and 1960s.
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Ralph Fults, born in Anna, part of
Bonnie and Clyde’s band.
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Sam Harris, toured with circuses
as the biggest man in the world. lawman in Farmersville.
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Bess Heard, started the McKinney
library, the McKinney Red Cross, and the Heard Museum.
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Elder Robert C. Horn, Christian
Church and Church of Christ minister, newspaper columnist for Collin
County and Lebanon, Tennessee, debater, lecturer.
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W. Elbert Kirkpatrick, famed
horticulturalist. Started and developed many strains of fruit,
including the Elberta peach. President of Texas Nursery Company for
many years.
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Oliver Loving, had a head right in
the Plano area before moving to west Texas and starting the
Goodnight Loving Cattle trail.
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Collin
McKinney, helped write the
Texas Declaration of Independence and the Texas Constitution. Served
in three of the first four congresses in Texas. The county and
county seat are named for him.
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Audie Murphy, from Farmersville,
most decorated soldier of World War II .
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Guy Rambo, early actor and fitness
expert. He started footraces from downtown McKinney to Town Lake. He
had an ice skating rink on his property in McKinney. Acted in
numerous local plays.
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Gen. W. S. Scott, Chief of Staff
of Army.
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George Washington Smith, fought in
the war for Texas independence, member of the Texas Rangers.
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Marion Snider, from Lucas. Pianist
for the Stamps Baxter Quartet.
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Belle Starr, part of the Sherley
family from Melissa and Anna.
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Charles Stibbens, only veteran of
the battle of San Jacinto buried in Collin county.
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James Webb Throckmorton, Lawyer
and doctor. Served in the state house and senate for Collin County,
General during the Civil War, Governor of Texas after the war.
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Admiral Henry Wiley, Commander of
Battleship Division of the U. S. Navy in World War II. Spanish
American War Camp in McKinney named for him. Naval destroyer named
for him.
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Gus Wilson, well known eccentric
philanthropist. gave cars, farms, and tuition to people he thought
were worthy. Many humorous tales of his eccentricity.
PEOPLE WHO PASSED THROUGH COLLIN COUNTY
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Joseph Baines, moved to Collin
County in the early 1860s to study law under James Throckmorton.
Married Ruth Huffman of Plano. Grandfather of Lyndon Baines
Johnson.
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Sam Bass, The first train robbery
in Texas is said to be when Sam Bass robbed the train in Allen in 1878.
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Bonnie and Clyde, There are many
stories of Bonnie and Clyde passing through the county on their way
to and from Dallas. Some times the sheriff set up ambushes for them,
but they always made it though. Other times people would report
seeing them to the sheriff and he was too busy to go look for them
at that time. Some of their gang members were in the Collin County
jail at one time.
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Ray and Floyd Hamilton, Floyd
Hamilton hid out in the fields in north Plano from the law. He was
arrested in this county. Raymond Hamilton was arrested in McKinney
in January of 1932, but escaped from the jail there.
In 1935 Ray Hamilton was traveling
with Ralph Fults through the county. The McKinney constable set up an
ambush at a creek on the road to Weston to capture them. They made
it through the ambush. When the weather got bad on the road between
Weston and Celina, they stopped at the house of Bill Mayes to stay
overnight. When they left in the morning they took three hostages -
Roy Mayes, L. B. Harlow and J. C. Loftice. They drove as far as Fort
Worth before Hamilton and Fults saw someone they knew and got a ride
with them. The Mayes group returned home after borrowing money from
Hamilton for gas. The McKinney constable was highly ridiculed for
his handling of the ambush that failed.
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Jesse and Frank James, The James
boys were part of Quantrell’s band. They were in Collin county
often. The County Fairs always had riding and shooting events. The
James boys were said to partake in, and usually win, them.
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Carrie Nation, smashed bars in
Farmersville and gave lectures in McKinney in 1905.
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Quantrell, Quantrell’s band was
from Missouri and many were related to Collin County settlers from
that state. The band would spend the summer in Missouri and the
winter in Collin County. Local residents considered them heroes and
not renegades. They hid them from the law.
Recommended citation:
"People of Note and Some Who Just Passed Through,"
Joy Gough.
Collin County, Texas History and Genealogy Webpage by Genealogy
Friends of Plano Libraries, Inc., <http://www.geocities/genfriendsghl>
[Accessed Fri February 13, 2004].
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