Sherman is a city in and the county seat of Grayson County, Texas, United States. The city's population in 2020 was 43,645. It is one of the two principal cities in the Sherman–Denison metropolitan statistical area, and is the largest city in the Texoma region of North Texas and southern Oklahoma.
History
thumb|left|Sherman in 1891
Sherman was named after General Sidney Sherman (July 23, 1805 – August 1, 1873), a hero of the Texas Revolution. The community was designated as the county seat by the act of the Texas Legislature, which created Grayson County on March 17, 1846. In 1847, a post office began operation. Sherman was originally located at the center of the county, but in 1848, it was moved about east to its current location. By 1850, Sherman had become an incorporated town under Texas law. It had also become a stop on the Butterfield Overland Mail route through Texas. By 1852, Sherman had a population of 300 and consisted of a public square with a log court house, several businesses, a district clerk's office, and a church along the east side of the square. In 1861, the first flour mill was built.
During the 1850s and 1860s, Sherman continued to develop and to participate in regional politics. Because many residents of North Texas had migrated from the Upper South and only a low percentage were slaveholders, considerable Unionist sentiment existed in the region. E. Junius Foster, the publisher of Sherman's antisecessionist Whig newspaper, the Patriot, circulated a petition to establish North Texas as an independent free state. Following Confederate passage of a conscription law, resistance arose to conscription in North Texas, especially as owners of many slaves were exempt.
Late in the Civil War, pro-Confederate guerrillas led by William Quantrill spent the winter of 1863-1864 in North Texas, with a camp in Sherman and two others in nearby Kentuckytown to the south and Fink to the north. Former guerrilla Jesse James also came to Sherman for his honeymoon. He was photographed seated on his horse in Sherman.
During the 1860s, secondary education developed in North Texas. The Sherman Male and Female High School began accepting students in 1866, under the patronage of the North Texas Methodist Conference. It became one of three private schools operating in Sherman. The school operated under several names, including the North Texas Female College and Conservatory of Music from 1892 to 1919 and Kidd-Key College and Conservatory, from 1919 to 1935. It gradually lost Methodist support, following the opening of Southern Methodist University in Dallas in 1915. In 1876, Austin College, the oldest continuously operating college in Texas, was relocated to Sherman from Huntsville. The Sherman Female Institute, later called Mary Nash College, opened in 1877 under sponsorship of the Baptist Church. It continued to operate until 1901, when the campus was sold to Kidd-Key College. Carr–Burdette College, a women's college affiliated with the Disciples of Christ, operated from 1894 to 1929. Sherman also has a long history within the Jewish community. By 1873, Jews in the region regularly met for the High Holidays.
While general depression and lawlessness occurred during the Reconstruction, Sherman remained commercially active. During the 1870s, Sherman's population reached 6,000. In 1875, after two fires destroyed many buildings east of the town square, a number of civic buildings were rebuilt using more permanent materials. This included a new Grayson County Courthouse built in 1876. In 1879, the Old Settlers' Association of North Texas formed and met near Sherman. The organization incorporated in 1898 and purchased Old Settlers' Park in 1909.
On May 15, 1896, a tornado measuring F5 on the Fujita scale struck Sherman. The tornado had a damage path wide and long, killing 73 people and injuring 200. About 50 homes were destroyed, with 20 of them obliterated.
In 1901, the first electric "Interurban" railway in Texas, the Denison and Sherman Railway, was completed between Sherman and Denison. The Texas Traction Company completed a interurban between Sherman and Dallas in 1908, and in 1911 purchased the Denison and Sherman Railway. Through the connections in Dallas and Denison, travel to the Texas destinations of Terrell, Corsicana, Waco, Fort Worth, Cleburne, and Denton, became possible, as well as to Durant, Oklahoma, by interurban railways. One popular destination on the Interurban between Sherman and Denison was Wood Lake Park, a private amusement park at the time. By 1948, all interurban rail service in Texas had been discontinued.
Sherman Riot of 1930
During the Sherman Riot of May 9, 1930, Governor Moody sent National Guard troops to Sherman on May 9 and martial law was declared in Sherman for ten days. and southwest of Durant, Oklahoma. Gainesville is to the west, and Bonham is to the east.
Climate
Sherman is part of the humid subtropical climate area.
Demographics
2020 census
As of the 2020 census, there were 43,645 people, 15,687 households, and 10,097 families residing in the city. The median age was 35.8 years, with 24.1% of residents under the age of 18 and 16.2% aged 65 years or older. For every 100 females there were 92.8 males, and for every 100 females age 18 and over there were 89.8 males.
96.7% of residents lived in urban areas, while 3.3% lived in rural areas.
DP1 data enumerated 16,679 households in Sherman, of which 31.9% had children under the age of 18 living in them. Of all households, 42.6% were married-couple households, 19.0% were households with a male householder and no spouse or partner present, and 31.3% were households with a female householder and no spouse or partner present. About 30.0% of all households were made up of individuals and 12.7% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older.
! Race !! Number !! Percent
|-
| White || 26,333 || 60.3%
|-
| Black or African American || 4,598 || 10.5%
|-
| American Indian and Alaska Native || 758 || 1.7%
|-
| Asian || 1,402 || 3.2%
|-
| Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander || 30 || 0.1%
|-
| Some other race || 5,382 || 12.3%
|-
| Two or more races || 5,142 || 11.8%
|-
| Hispanic or Latino (of any race) || 10,579 || 24.2%
|}
Economy
In 2022, Texas Instruments broke ground to build an Integrated Circuit fab campus in Sherman. In late 2025, Texas Instruments began operations at a new $30 billion, 3,000-job, 300-millimeter semiconductor wafer fabrication plant near Sherman's southern city limits. GlobalWafers has opened a $5 billion, 1,500-job wafer factory nearby.
;Top employers
- Tyson Foods
- Texas Instruments
- GlobalWafers
- Coherent Corp.
- Grayson County
- City of Sherman
- Cooper B-Line Systems
- Austin College
- Fisher Controls/ Emerson Process Management
- Presco Products
- Progress Rail
- Consolidated Containers
- Plyler Construction
- Starr Aircraft
- Offen Petroleum
- GlobiTech
- Sunny Delight Beverages
Government
Sherman operates under a council-manager form of local government, and is a home rule city under Texas state law. As of , the city was led by City Manager Dr. Zachary Flores and Mayor Shawn Teamann.
The Texas Department of Criminal Justice operates the Sherman District Parole Office in Sherman.
Education
thumb|Sherman High School
Public schools
Most children in Sherman are zoned to the Sherman Independent School District, which includes Sherman High School. Some parts are in Denison Independent School District or Howe Independent School District.
Private schools
A small percentage of children attend one of the three private schools in Sherman: Grayson Christian School, St. Mary's Catholic School, or Texoma Christian School.
Colleges and universities
thumb|right|Administration Building on the Austin College campusAustin College, a private, Presbyterian, liberal arts college, relocated to Sherman in 1876. Founded in 1849, it is the oldest college or university in Texas operating under its original charter. Grayson College, a community college based in neighboring Denison, operates a branch campus in Sherman.
Libraries
The Sherman Public Library serves the city of Sherman and all citizens. The library underwent a $2 million, floor-to-ceiling renovation in 2017, reopening to the public in August 2018.
Media
thumb|KXII television studio in Sherman
Magazine
- Texoma Living! magazine
Newspaper
- The Herald Democrat
Radio stations
- KLAK Adult Contemporary 97.5 K-LAKE FM
- KMAD Mad Rock 102.5
- KMKT Katy Country 93.1
- KQDR Hot 107.3 FM
- KJIMKJIM The Memory Maker AM 1500 and FM 101.3 Sherman's Oldest and Newest Radio Station
Television stations
- KTEN Channel 10 – (NBC)
- KTEN DT Channel 10.2 – (The CW Texoma)
- KTEN DT Channel 10.3 – (ABC)
- KXII Channel 12 – (CBS)
- KXII DT Channel 12.2 (My Texoma)
- KXII DT Channel 12.3 (Fox Texoma)
Infrastructure
thumb|Sherman City Hall
Transportation
- 20px U.S. Highway 75 Oklahoma to Dallas
- 20px U.S. Highway 82 east-west: Georgia to New Mexico
- 20px SH 56 east-west: Honey Grove to Whitesboro
- 20px SH 91 north-south: Achille, Oklahoma to Sherman
- 20px SH 11 east-west: Linden to Sherman
- 20px FM 1417 north-south: Denison to Sherman
- 20px FM 691 east-west: Sherman to North Texas Regional Airport
- 20px FM 131 north-south: Denison to Sherman
- 20px FM 697 east-west: Whitewright to Sherman
Sherman is served by two U.S. Highways: US 75 (Sam Rayburn Freeway) and US 82. (The latter is locally designated as the Buck Owens Freeway after the famous musician who was born in Sherman.) It is also served by three Texas State Highways, which extend beyond Grayson County: State Highway 11, State Highway 56, and State Highway 91 (Texoma Parkway), one of the main commercial strips that connects Sherman and Denison, and also extends to Lake Texoma.
thumb|Sherman Municipal Airport
General aviation service is provided by Sherman Municipal Airport and North Texas Regional Airport/Perrin Field in Denison.
thumb|Wilson N. Jones Regional Medical Center in Sherman
TAPS Public Transit is the sole transit provider for Sherman, with curb-to-curb paratransit for all residents.
Medical care
The city of Sherman is served locally by Wilson N. Jones Regional Medical Center, Texoma Medical Center, and a Baylor Scott & White surgery center.
Sports
In 2023, organizers announced Sherman as the home of two new minor league sports franchises. A semi-professional baseball team called the Sherman Shadowcats began play in the Mid-American League during late spring of 2024. The club moved to the Texas Collegiate League for the 2026 season.
Notable people
See also
- May 1896 tornado outbreak sequence
- Sherman, Texas bus accident
- Sherman, Texas minor league baseball teams
Notes
References
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Further reading
- Grayson County Frontier Village, The History of Grayson County Texas, Hunter Publishing Co., Winston-Salem, North Carolina, 1979.
- Redshaw, Peggy A., "Sherman, Texas, and the 1918 Pandemic Flu," East Texas Historical Journal, 51 (Spring 2013), 67–85.
- E. R. Bills (author). Black Holocaust: The Paris Horror and a Legacy of Texas Terror. Charleston, SC: The History Press, 2015.
External links
- City of Sherman official website
- Sherman Chamber of Commerce
- Sherman article in the Handbook of Texas
