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Cities Near Carrollton, TX
12 Photos
2206 Lockwood Dr
Carrollton, TX (in city)
4 Bed, 2 Bath
Home
1456 sq.ft.
Excellent Starter Home! Completely updated inside. Foundation was repaired 5 yrs ago
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18 Photos
4333 Onyx Dr
Carrollton, TX (in city)
3 Bed, 2 Bath
Home
1503 sq.ft.
This is a great one story with a versatile floor plan. It offers den with a fireplace and is open
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13 Photos
3802 Virginia Pine Cir
Carrollton, TX (in city)
3 Bed, 2 Bath
Home
1789 sq.ft.
Description:
This 1789 square foot single family home has 3 bedrooms and 2.0 bathrooms. It
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3113 Birch Dr
Carrollton, TX (in city)
4 Bed, 2+ Bath
Home
2455 sq.ft.
Local city information for Carrollton, TX
Carrollton is a city in Denton County, Dallas County and Collin County in the U.S. state of Texas. As of 2005, census estimates the city's total population to be 122,699. Carrollton is a suburb of Dallas.
The city of Carrollton has been named to America's 2006 Top 100 Places to Live for 2006 by Relocate America.
Also, in 2006, Carrollton was selected as the 19th best place to live in the United States by
Money magazine. It was then, later, name the 15th best place to live in 2008 by
Money magazine.
The area was first settled by Jared Ford in 1842 by William and Mary Larner on a site within the Peters' Colony grant. In 1844, the A. W. Perry family claimed land in the area around Trinity Mills, where, in partnership with Wade H. Witt, a mill was established.
The English colony, a group of families in the northeastern area of settlement which crossed into Denton County, was home to large landowners including the Furneaux, Jackson, Morgan, and Rowe families. It is most likely that Carrollton was named for Carrollton, Illinois, the original home of many of these settlers.
Early on, Carrollton's livelihood was exclusively agricultural, but following the construction of the Dallas-Wichita Railroad through Trinity Mills in 1878, the community began to grow in its industrial significance. Carrollton's significance was further strengthened when the railroad was extended to Denton in 1880 by Jay Gould (who sold the line to the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad (the Katy) in 1881). By 1885, Carrollton had flour mills, cotton gins, two churches, a school, and a population of 150. The St. Louis Southwestern Railway (Cotton Belt) crossed the Katy in 1888 and the town became a shipping center for livestock, cotton, cottonseed, and grain, helping the town surpass Trinity Mills to the north.
In 1913 Carrollton was officially incorporated, and W. F. Vinson was elected mayor. A gravel industry that began in Carrollton in 1912 transformed the city, by the late 1940s, to a "grain and gravel" town. The city also supported a brick plant, a dairy industry, and National Metal Products established itself in the city in 1946.
Post-World War II, the city grew rapidly. In 1950 its population stood at 1,610, and it grew to 4,242 in 1960 and 13,855 in 1970. At this point, significant suburban growth began spilling out of north Dallas and the city grew tremendously between 1970 and 1980, with a documented growth of 193% to 40,595 inhabitants. By 1983, the population was 52,000, by 1990, it had reached 82,169, and by 2000 the population had grown to 109,576. 2005 estimates place the population of Carrollton at 122,699.
List your home on the MLS in Carrollton, Texas