Seymour, TX
Music connected to Seymour
About Seymour
- • Singer-songwriter Johnny Duncan, known for country hits, was born in Seymour.
- • The National Ranching Heritage Center in Lubbock has artifacts from early Seymour ranches.
- • The Fort Griffin military road spurred Seymour's initial growth in the 1870s.
- • A local legend claims there's buried outlaw treasure near Seymour's courthouse.
- • The Great Depression severely impacted Seymour's cotton-based economy.
- • Named for surveyor Seymour Munday, the town was established in 1879.
- • The population is approximately 2,500, less than its peak in the early 1900s.
- • Sitting at 1,304 feet, it's slightly higher than Wichita Falls.
- • Agriculture and ranching remain the primary economic drivers for Seymour.
- • A peaceful, small-town atmosphere with friendly faces permeates Seymour.
- • The Dallas Cowboys, a few hours east, won Super Bowl XXX here in 1996.
- • Seymour High School's football team has a rich history of district championships.
- • The Seymour area contains Permian red beds, known for fossils of early reptiles and amphibians.
- • The Brazos River watershed drains the area around Seymour.
- • White-tailed deer are commonly observed near Seymour.
- • Mesquite trees dominate the landscape surrounding Seymour.
- • The area was historically inhabited by Wichita and Comanche tribes.
- • Seymour was the site of a major fire in 1894 that destroyed much of the downtown area.
- • The Baylor County Courthouse, a Romanesque Revival structure, was built in 1884.
- • U.S. Highway 82 passes through Seymour, connecting Wichita Falls and Lubbock.