Talk:North Texas

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Untitled[edit]

Earlier, the list of major cities included just the several municipalities of the Metroplex. By their nature, suburbs are not "major cities". -Acjelen 03:11, 1 May 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Map[edit]

Can we get a map image? ~ Dpr 06:09, 14 Jun 2005 (UTC)

I agree. We need to get a general map of the area. --Stallions2010 19:25, 4 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Map added, I'm pretty ignorant of Texas geography though - if any counties there don't belong just let me know and I'll fix it. Kmusser 15:59, 22 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Someone must have deleted your map. I hope it can be reinstated.71.221.117.58 (talk) 03:15, 19 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Culturally?[edit]

I grew up in Fort Worth, which we called "The Gateway to the West." It is news to me that Fort Worth is considered "North Texas." Dallas, on the other hand, is a different story. While Fort Worth is certainly part of the Metroplex, I'd recommend changing the article to read "east of Fort Worth" Ladam11 (talk) 22:34, 27 January 2017 (UTC)[reply]

North Texas is not closely related to the states mentioned in the article. First off Louisiana does not share besides minor things with Miss, AL, GA, and SC. Second the two regions linked together are totally different by climate, vegetation, and racial demographics. North Texas is dry and hot in the summer and cold and fair in the winter. North Texas has a minor African-American population compared to the prevalance of hispanics and whites. I guarantee you in all of those states mentioned blacks make up the largest minority. The states mentioned also have very similar vegetation, loblolly and longleaf pines play major roles in the ecosystems of nearly all of uninhabited LA, MS, AL, GA, and SC. Where can you find one heavily wooded area of southern pines in North Texas? In fact the Houston area is heavily wooded with the pines. I think Houston and East Texas would share most in common with the states above culturally. Was there systematic racism in N. Texas? No. Are the accents similar? No. Please do not try to jumble Dallas as some city full of southern heritage and pride, instead take pride in Texas. Let Atlanta, New Orleans or whatever the hell the southerners think is their sweet ole dixie home be.

That's true to an extent. East Texas definitely is much more similar to the states than North Texas is. However, Southern culture is still strong in the region. Not in terms of physical geography, but culture itself; and in relation to the other regions of Texas, excluding East Texas, it needs to be mentioned to give an accurate depiction of human geography in the state. Most early settlers to North Texas were from other parts of the South. Also, Texas is in the South, so your last comment was a bit degrading towards Dallas itself. Yes, we should take pride in Texas, but it is part of a larger region...you guessed it, the South. --Stallions2010 22:12, 28 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

WikiProject Fort Worth[edit]

I have proposed a WikiProject for Fort Worth. Please show your support by going here and adding your name to the list of interested Wikipedians. To improve the quality of Fort Worth-related articles, I believe it necessary now for this project to exist. The Dallas, Texas article, although not yet a featured article, is of signficantly higher quality than Fort Worth's article is. Thanks! Stallions2010 02:03, 16 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Southern Plains[edit]

I believe N. Texas has more in common with that of the southern plains rather than that of the south. E. Texas and SE. Texas definitley whistle dixie a little better than they brand cattle. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 24.99.142.106 (talk) 01:29, 5 December 2006 (UTC).[reply]

>>While it is true North Texas has a topography (except for the cross timbers region) that more resembles the plains than the forested South (which includes East Texas), the region was settled primarily by those from the older Southern states and it is that culture that dominates. I do however believe that the part of the South it has most in common with is -- unlike in East Texas -- Arkansas and parts of Tennesee rather than Mississippi and Alabama. Migrants from the Upper South tended to come to North Texas, while East Texas was the area for those entering from the Deep South. TexasReb 15:30, 20 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

North Texas does not have more in common with the southern plains; as a local it has more in common with the south.

Randy Galloway?[edit]

Really? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.170.107.31 (talk) 01:52, 10 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

This entire article needs to be eliminated - there's no such place as "North Texas"[edit]

This article perpetuates pseudo-information.

As can be seen by the original author's failure to document in any substantial way the existence of any such entity as "North Texas" [sic], that phrase is nothing more than a grammatical faux pas; the proper phrase is "northern Texas" or, perhaps more accurately in terms of what the original author intended to describe, "northern central Texas" or (more accurately in my opinion) "central northern Texas" - an admitted mouthful.

So where is the capital of "North Texas"? Maybe there's a document in the State Archives vouching for the formal establishment of "North Texas" as a specific entity? No? Then "North Texas" doesn't exist. The University of North Texas is free to call itself whatever it wants, as is the North Texas Council of Governments (NTCoG); that doesn't mean there's any such formally-named geographic location as "North Texas".

Admittedly the area around the Dallas/Fort-Worth Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) has little in common with Texas's panhandle - clearly part of northern Texas - so a distinction needs to be made, geographically at the very least. Thus I suggest "central northern Texas". Tyler and points east, as well as Lubbock and points north, can both legitimately be described as belonging to northern Texas, but in the case of Tyler it's also very much a part of eastern Texas, and Lubbock belongs to western Texas as much as it does to the northern part of the state. This would seemingly leave the Dallas/Fort-Worth MSA as belonging to "northern central Texas". Except that "central Texas" brings Temple, Austin, San-Marcos, New Braunfels, Kerrville, Johnson City, Fredericksburg, Junction, Llano, Mason, San Saba and Lampasas to mind - maybe Waco too at the northeastern-most (funny how "northeastern" and "northwestern" are perfectly acceptable words but there's no "northcentralern" - just northern). Dallas and Fort Worth are not part of that region, lying well beyond even its northernmost fringe.

Truth is, everything north of a line drawn between about El Paso and Nacogdoches qualifies as part of northern Texas, just as everything south of that can be called southern Texas, depending on the context; the same goes for a line from from about Laredo to Vernon when distinguishing eastern versus western Texas. But we need, and have, more useful descriptors: thus Tyler, Jefferson and Texarkana are more accurately referred to as being part of northeastern Texas just as Lubbock, Amarillo and all of the panhandle are part of northwestern Texas.

All of which leaves me thinking the most accurate description for the area around Dallas and Fort Worth is best described as "central northern Texas" and not requiring a distinct Wikipedida article. However the opinions that matter most on this issue are those of professional geographers, linguists and historians, and I yield to them. But I strongly suspect they would say that to refer to any "North Texas" is to perpetuate bad grammar and promote an excessively distinct and unreal existence. Simply put: North Texas does not exist as a distinct entity, therefore it doesn't deserve a distinct Wikipedia article.

Put another way: "North Texas" is grammatically incorrect as well as being non-existent. One could perhaps live with "northern Texas" in terms of its existence, but it's not descriptive enough - it's too indistinct. Since the Dallas/Fort-Worth area is not part of either northeastern or northwestern Texas, that would seem to leave "central northern Texas". BLZebubba (talk) 12:07, 5 August 2014 (UTC)[reply]

A definition of "North Texas" but needs sourcing. Never eliminate this article.[edit]

Historical accuracy - North Texas voted AGAINST secession and were murdered by South Texans. Pulled from an amateur historian's website.

"I've mentioned this before, but one of my ancestors was hung in Texas by a lynch mob started by plantation owners who used the local media to convince the local residents that people were moving down from the north to kill women and children. My ancestor had just moved from Ohio with his wife and children. His wife's family was from Texas and they inherited land. I don't think they would have taken the risk otherwise. They still call it the Great Gainesville Hanging in Texas and say very little about it in Gainesville, which I don't mind publicly saying is shameful. They literally fed the older men to the mob to appease them until the military arrived. One of the men they hung was in a wheelchair and had to be carried to the gallows. That was another form of vigilantism in the south. Like the ranchers and the sheepherders, the plantation owners hired vigilantes to attack the people of north Texas--a little known fact that most people who lived in north Texas prior to the Civil War voted against secession."

http://wildwesthistory.blogspot.com/2013/10/vigilante-justice-in-american-old-west.html — Preceding unsigned comment added by 50.20.81.66 (talk) 16:02, 26 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]