20 Fun Facts About Fort Worth Texas
Fort Worth, Texas is a city filled with rich history, culture, and entertainment. Here are 20 fun facts about this cowboy town:
- Fort Worth was established as a military post in 1849 and originally named Camp Worth after General William Jenkins Worth. The “Fort” was added later.
- The Fort Worth Stockyards National Historic District is one of the most famous areas, where you can still see cattle drives down Exchange Avenue.
- Billy Bob’s Texas, located in the Stockyards, is the world’s largest honky-tonk with 127,000 square feet. It hosts big-name concerts and bull riding events.
- The annual Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo lasts over three weeks and is one of the oldest and largest in the United States, dating back to 1896.
- Sundance Square in downtown features 35 blocks of restaurants, shops, and lively nightlife. The name comes from the famous Sundance Kid who hid out in Fort Worth.
- The Kimbell Art Museum holds an internationally renowned collection and a unique vaulted, perforated ceiling designed by famous architect Louis I. Kahn.
- Fort Worth was nicknamed “Panther City” in the early 1900s because of a panther that roamed the area and was finally killed by local residents.
- The Fort Worth Zoo is home to over 7,000 animals and has been rated as one of the top zoos in the nation.
- The Texas Motor Speedway hosts exciting NASCAR races throughout the year and seats over 150,000 people.
- Fort Worth was the first city in Texas to install electric street lamps in 1883.
- Located downtown, the Chisolm Trail Mural is the world’s largest painting at 17,554 square feet on the side of a building.
- Actress Betty Buckley who played Abby Bradford in the TV show Eight is Enough is a Fort Worth native.
- Fort Worth is home to the oldest continuously running rodeo – the Southwestern Exposition and Livestock Show starting in 1896.
- Popular musician and pianist Van Cliburn who lived in Fort Worth won the International Tchaikovsky Piano Competition in Moscow during the Cold War.
- The Fort Worth Water Gardens designed by Philip Johnson is an architectural wonder with three different concrete pools and waterfalls.
- The annual Main Street Arts Festival attracts over 200,000 people enjoying arts, crafts, food, and 4 stages with music.
- Fort Worth has the world’s first and only twice-daily cattle drive down Exchange Avenue in the Stockyards.
- Amateur boxer Jack Johnson who became the first African American world heavyweight boxing champion was born in Galveston but lived in Fort Worth TX.
- Longhorn cattle drives traveling the Chisholm Trail went through this city from 1867 to 1884 when the railroads expanded west.
- The Fort Worth Museum of Science and History has an impressive collection, dinosaurs exhibits, Omni theater, and interactive children’s museum.
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