Wichita Falls (/ˈwɪtʃɪtɑː/ WITCH-i-tah) is a city in and the seat of government of Wichita County, Texas, United States.[7] It is the principal city of the Wichita Falls Metropolitan Statistical Area, which encompasses all of Archer, Clay, and Wichita counties. According to the 2010 census, it had a population of 104,553, making it the 38th-most populous city in Texas. In addition, its central business district is 5 miles (8 km) from Sheppard Air Force Base, which is home to the Air Force's largest technical training wing and the Euro-NATO Joint Jet Pilot Training program, the world's only multinationally staffed and managed flying training program chartered to produce combat pilots for both USAF and NATO.
Wichita Falls, Texas | |
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City | |
![]() The "restored Falls" of the Wichita River just off Interstate 44 | |
![]() Flag | |
![]() Location in the state of Texas | |
![]() ![]() Wichita Falls ![]() ![]() Wichita Falls | |
Coordinates: 33°54′34″N 98°29′58″W | |
Country | ![]() |
State | ![]() |
County | Wichita |
Government | |
• Type | Council–manager |
• Mayor | Stephen Santellana (R)[1] |
• City Council | Members
|
• City Manager | Darron Leiker |
• Assistant City Managers | Paul Menzies, Blake Jurecek |
Area | |
• City | 72.03 sq mi (186.57 km2) |
• Land | 72.01 sq mi (186.51 km2) |
• Water | 0.02 sq mi (0.06 km2) |
Elevation | 948 ft (289 m) |
Population (2010)[4] | |
• City | 104,553 |
• Estimate (2019)[5] | 104,683 |
• Rank | US: 288th |
• Density | 1,453.73/sq mi (561.28/km2) |
• Urban | 99,437 (US: 301st) |
• Metro | 151,201 (US: 268th) |
Time zone | UTC−6 (CST) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC−5 (CDT) |
ZIP codes | 76301-11 |
Area code | 940 |
FIPS code | 48-79000[6] |
Interstates | ![]() |
U.S. Routes | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Website | City of Wichita Falls |
The city is home to the Newby-McMahon Building (otherwise known as the "world's littlest skyscraper"), constructed downtown in 1919 and featured in Robert Ripley's Ripley's Believe It or Not!.
The Choctaw Native Americans settled the area in the early 1800s from their native Mississippi area once Americans negotiated to relocate them after the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek.[8] The treaty was signed and proclaimed in 1830-1831. As late as 1841, a large Indian settlement was present in the area that is now the city of Wichita Falls.[9]
American settlers arrived in the 1860s, mainly as cattle ranchers. The city was named Wichita Falls on September 27, 1876, as the Wichita River runs through the area and there was a waterfall in the river’s course in 1876. Just ten years later in 1886, a flood destroyed the original waterfall on the Wichita River for which the city was named.[9][10] After nearly 100 years of visitors wanting to visit the no longer existing falls, the city built an artificial waterfall beside the river in Lucy Park. The recreated falls are 54 ft (16 m) high and recirculate at 3,500 gallons per minute. They are visible to south-bound traffic on Interstate 44.
On the day the city was named in 1876, a sale of town lots was held at what is now the corner of Seventh and Ohio Streets – the birthplace of the city.[11] The Fort Worth & Denver City Railway arrived in September 1882, the same year the city became the county seat of Wichita County.[8] The city grew westwards from the original FW&DC train depot which was located at the northwest corner of Seventh Street and the FW&DC.[11] This area is now referred to as the Depot Square Historic District,[12][13] which has been declared a Texas Historic Landmark.[14]
The early history of Wichita Falls well into the 20th century also rests on the work of two entrepreneurs, Joseph A. Kemp[15] and his brother-in-law, Frank Kell. Kemp and Kell were pioneers in food processing and retailing, flour milling, railroads, cattle, banking, and oil.[16]
Downtown Wichita Falls was the city's main shopping area for many years. Those shops lost ground to the creation of new shopping centers throughout the city beginning with Parker Square in 1953 and other similar developments during the 1960s and 1970s, culminating with the opening of Sikes Senter Mall in 1974. The city has been seeking funding to rebuild and restore the downtown area since 2010.[8]
Wichita Falls was once home to offices of several oil companies and related industries, along with oil refineries operated by the Continental Oil Company (now ConocoPhillips) until 1952 and Panhandle Oil Company American Petrofina) until 1965.[17] Both firms continued to use a portion of their former refineries as gasoline/oil terminal facilities for many years.
A devastating tornado hit the north and northwest portions of Wichita Falls along with Sheppard Air Force Base during the afternoon of April 3, 1964 (later referred to as "Black Friday"). As the first violent tornado on record to hit the Wichita Falls area,[18] it left seven dead and more than 100 injured. Additionally, the tornado caused roughly $15 million in property damage with about 225 homes destroyed and another 250 damaged.[19] It was rated F5, the highest rating on the Fujita scale, but it is overshadowed by the 1979 tornado.[20]
An F4 tornado struck the heavily populated southern sections of Wichita Falls in the late afternoon on Tuesday, April 10, 1979 (known as "Terrible Tuesday"). It was part of an outbreak that produced 30 tornadoes around the region. Despite having nearly an hour's advance warning that severe weather was imminent, 42 people were killed (including 25 in vehicles) and 1,800 were injured because it arrived just as many people were driving home from work.[21] It left 20,000 people homeless and caused $400 million in damage, a U.S. record not topped by an individual tornado until the F5 Moore–Oklahoma City tornado of May 3, 1999.[22]
Wichita Falls is about 15 miles (24 km) south of the border with Oklahoma, 115 mi (185 km) northwest of Fort Worth, and 140 mi (230 km) southwest of Oklahoma City. According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 70.71 square miles (183.1 km2), of which 70.69 square miles (183.1 km2) are land and 0.02 square miles (0.052 km2) (0.03%) is covered by water.[23]
Wichita Falls experiences a humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification Cfa), featuring long, very hot and humid summers, and cool winters. The city has some of the highest summer daily maximum temperatures in the entire U.S. outside of the Desert Southwest. Temperatures have hit 100 °F (38 °C) as early as March 27 and as late as October 17, but more typically reach that level on 28 days annually, with 102 days of 90 °F (32 °C) or higher annually; the average window for the latter mark is April 9–October 10. However, 59 to 60 nights of freezing lows occur, and an average of 4.8 days where the high does not rise above freezing. The monthly daily average temperature ranges from 42.0 °F (5.6 °C) in January to 84.4 °F (29.1 °C) in July. The record low temperature is −12 °F (−24 °C) on January 4, 1947. The highest recorded temperature is 117 °F (47 °C) on June 28, 1980. Snowfall is sporadic and averages 4.1 in (10 cm) per season, while rainfall is typically greatest in early summer.
From 2010 through 2013 Wichita Falls, along with a large portion of the south-central US, experienced a persistent drought. In September 2011, Wichita Falls became the first Texas city[24] to have 100 days of 100 °F (38 °C) or higher within one year.[lower-alpha 1] On every day from June 22 to August 12, the temperature reached 100 °F or higher, and from May 27 to September 3, the temperature reached 90 °F or higher. In addition, the all-time warm daily minimum of 88 °F (31 °C) was set on July 26, and June, July, and August of that year were all the hottest on record.[25]
During the 2015 Texas–Oklahoma floods, Wichita Falls broke its all-time record for the wettest month, with 17.00 inches of rain recorded in May 2015.[26]
Climate data for Wichita Falls, Texas (1981–2010 normals,[lower-alpha 2] extremes 1897–present[lower-alpha 3]) | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
Record high °F (°C) | 87 (31) |
94 (34) |
100 (38) |
103 (39) |
110 (43) |
117 (47) |
115 (46) |
113 (45) |
111 (44) |
102 (39) |
90 (32) |
91 (33) |
117 (47) |
Mean maximum °F (°C) | 76.1 (24.5) |
80.9 (27.2) |
87.9 (31.1) |
91.4 (33.0) |
97.1 (36.2) |
100.2 (37.9) |
105.3 (40.7) |
105.0 (40.6) |
99.8 (37.7) |
92.5 (33.6) |
83.0 (28.3) |
76.2 (24.6) |
107.1 (41.7) |
Average high °F (°C) | 54.2 (12.3) |
58.3 (14.6) |
67.0 (19.4) |
75.8 (24.3) |
83.6 (28.7) |
91.4 (33.0) |
96.9 (36.1) |
96.6 (35.9) |
88.1 (31.2) |
77.0 (25.0) |
65.1 (18.4) |
54.7 (12.6) |
75.8 (24.3) |
Average low °F (°C) | 29.8 (−1.2) |
33.5 (0.8) |
41.2 (5.1) |
49.4 (9.7) |
59.6 (15.3) |
67.6 (19.8) |
71.9 (22.2) |
71.4 (21.9) |
63.3 (17.4) |
52.0 (11.1) |
40.3 (4.6) |
30.8 (−0.7) |
51.0 (10.6) |
Mean minimum °F (°C) | 15.3 (−9.3) |
17.5 (−8.1) |
24.4 (−4.2) |
34.2 (1.2) |
45.8 (7.7) |
58.6 (14.8) |
64.5 (18.1) |
63.0 (17.2) |
48.2 (9.0) |
36.3 (2.4) |
25.1 (−3.8) |
16.0 (−8.9) |
9.7 (−12.4) |
Record low °F (°C) | −12 (−24) |
−8 (−22) |
6 (−14) |
24 (−4) |
35 (2) |
50 (10) |
54 (12) |
53 (12) |
38 (3) |
21 (−6) |
14 (−10) |
−7 (−22) |
−12 (−24) |
Average precipitation inches (mm) | 1.14 (29) |
1.75 (44) |
2.20 (56) |
2.61 (66) |
3.79 (96) |
4.15 (105) |
1.59 (40) |
2.50 (64) |
2.81 (71) |
3.11 (79) |
1.65 (42) |
1.62 (41) |
28.92 (735) |
Average snowfall inches (cm) | 1.4 (3.6) |
0.7 (1.8) |
0.5 (1.3) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
trace | 0.3 (0.76) |
1.0 (2.5) |
3.9 (9.9) |
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) | 4.8 | 5.3 | 6.7 | 6.2 | 8.7 | 7.7 | 5.0 | 6.2 | 6.0 | 7.4 | 5.3 | 5.0 | 74.3 |
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) | 0.6 | 0.4 | 0.2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.1 | 0.7 | 2.0 |
Source: National Weather Service,[25][27] Weather.com[28] |
Notes:
Historical population | |||
---|---|---|---|
Census | Pop. | %± | |
1890 | 1,978 | — | |
1900 | 2,480 | 25.4% | |
1910 | 8,200 | 230.6% | |
1920 | 40,079 | 388.8% | |
1930 | 43,690 | 9.0% | |
1940 | 45,112 | 3.3% | |
1950 | 68,042 | 50.8% | |
1960 | 101,724 | 49.5% | |
1970 | 96,265 | −5.4% | |
1980 | 94,201 | −2.1% | |
1990 | 96,259 | 2.2% | |
2000 | 104,197 | 8.2% | |
2010 | 104,553 | 0.3% | |
2020 | 102,316 | −2.1% | |
U.S. Decennial Census[29] Texas Almanac: 1850–2000[30] 2018 Estimate[31] |
Race | Number | Percentage |
---|---|---|
White (NH) | 57,750 | 56.44% |
Black or African American (NH) | 12,838 | 12.55% |
Native American or Alaska Native (NH) | 737 | 0.72% |
Asian (NH) | 2,464 | 2.41% |
Pacific Islander (NH) | 124 | 0.12% |
Some Other Race (NH) | 409 | 0.4% |
Mixed/Multi-Racial (NH) | 4,813 | 4.7% |
Hispanic or Latino | 23,181 | 22.66% |
Total | 102,316 |
As of the 2020 United States census, there were 102,316 people, 37,297 households, and 23,087 families residing in the city.
As of the census[6] of 2000, 104,197 people, 37,970 households, and 24,984 families resided in the city.[35] The population density was 1,474.1 inhabitants per square mile (569.2/km2). The 41,916 housing units averaged 593.0 per square mile (229.0/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 75.1% White, 12.4% African American, 0.9% Native American, 2.2% Asian, 0.1% Pacific Islander, 6.4% from other races, and 3.0% from two or more races. Hispanics or Latinos of any race were 14.0% of the population.[35]
Of the 37,970 households, 33.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 49.7% were married couples living together, 12.3% had a female householder with no husband present, and 34.2% were not families. About 28.7% of all households were made up of individuals, and 10.7% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.46, and the average family size was 3.04.[35]
In the city, the population was distributed as 24.7% under the age of 18, 15.2% from 18 to 24, 29.3% from 25 to 44, 18.6% from 45 to 64, and 12.3% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 39 years. For every 100 females, there were 106.2 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 106.7 males.[35]
The median income for a household in the city was $32,554, and for a family was $39,911. Males had a median income of $27,609 versus $21,877 for females. The per capita income for the city was $16,761. About 10.8% of families and 13.9% of the population were below the poverty line, including 17.7% of those under age 18 and 10.3% of those age 65 or over.[35]
According to Wichita Falls Chamber of Commerce, the top employers in the city are:
# | Employer | # of Employees |
---|---|---|
1 | Sheppard Air Force Base | 7,222 |
2 | Wichita Falls Independent School District | 2,378 |
3 | United Regional Health Care System | 2,100 |
4 | Midwestern State University | 1,276 |
5 | City of Wichita Falls | 1,217 |
6 | Arconic | 1,072 |
7 | Walmart (3 locations) | 1,009 |
8 | North Texas State Hospital -Wichita Falls Campus | 1,000 |
9 | Vitro[36] | 934 |
10 | James V. Allred Unit[37] | 921 |
Wichita Falls is part of a bi-state media market that also includes the nearby, smaller city of Lawton, Oklahoma. According to Nielsen Media Research estimates for the 2016–17 season, the market – which encompasses ten counties in western north Texas and six counties in southwestern Oklahoma, has 152,950 households with at least one television set, making it the 148th-largest television market in the United States; the market also has an average of 120,200 radio listeners ages 12 and over, making it the 250th largest radio market in the nation.[38][39]
KERA-TV out of Dallas–Fort Worth serves as the default PBS member station for Wichita Falls via a translator station on UHF channel 44.
Lucy Park is a 170-acre (69 ha) park with a log cabin, duck pond, swimming pool, playground, frisbee golf course, and picnic areas. It has multiple paved walkways suitable for walking, running, biking, or rollerskating, including a river walk that goes to a recreation of the original falls for which the city was named (the original falls were destroyed in a 19th-century flood; the new falls were built in response to numerous tourist requests to visit the "Wichita Falls"). It is one of 37 parks throughout the city. The parks range in size from small neighborhood facilities to the 258 acres of Weeks Park featuring the Champions Course at Weeks Park, an 18-hole golf course. In addition, an off-leash dog park is within Lake Wichita Park and a skatepark adjacent to the city's softball complex. Also, unpaved trails for off-road biking and hiking are available.[citation needed]
Wichita Falls is the home of the annual Hotter'N Hell Hundred, the largest single day century bicycle ride in the United States and one of the largest races in the world. The race started as a way for the city to celebrate its centennial in 1982. The race takes place over a weekend in August, and there are multiple events for people to participate in.[40]
In 2014, the Wichita Falls Nighthawks, an indoor football team, joined the Indoor Football League[41] but suspended operations after the 2017 season.
The city has also been home to a number of semi-professional, developmental, and minor league sports teams, including the Wichita Falls Drillers, a semi-pro football team that has won numerous league titles and a national championship; Wichita Falls Kings (formerly known as Wichita Falls Razorbacks), the professional basketball team Wichita Falls Texans of the Continental Basketball Association; Wichita Falls Fever in the Lone Star Soccer Alliance (1989–92); the Wichita Falls Spudders baseball team in the Texas League; the Wichita Falls Wildcats (formerly the Wichita Falls Rustlers) of the North American Hockey League, an American Tier II junior hockey league; and the Wichita Falls Roughnecks (formerly the Graham Roughnecks) of the Texas Collegiate League.[citation needed] The Dallas Cowboys held training camp in Wichita Falls during the late 1990s. However, the sustainability of minor or rookie league sports franchises in the Wichita Falls region have a questionable future.[42]
The Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame relocated to Wichita Falls from Amsterdam, New York, in November 2015.
The mayor of Wichita Falls is Stephen Santellana, who was elected in 2016 and reelected in 2018. Mayors are elected on a nonpartisan ballot.
The Wichita Falls City Council has six members, as follows.
The city manager is Darron Leiker.
Name | Term Start | Term End |
---|---|---|
Otis T. Bacon | 1889 | 1892 |
J.Q. Morrison | 1892 | 1894 |
Charles O. Joline | 1894 | 1898 |
Charles W. Bean | 1900 | 1904 |
T.B. Noble | 1904 | 1912 |
Jonathan M. Bell | 1912 | 1914 |
J.W. Bradley | 1914 | 1914 |
A.H. Britain | 1914 | 1918 |
J.B. Marlow | 1918 | 1920 |
Walter D. Cline | 1920 | 1922 |
Frank Collier | 1922 | 1925 |
R.E. Shepherd | 1925 | 1928 |
J.W. Akin | 1928 | 1930 |
Walter Nelson, Jr. | 1930 | 1934 |
J.T. Young | 1934 | 1936 |
W.E. Fitzgerald | 1936 | 1942 |
W.P. (Bill) Hood | 1942 | 1944 |
W.B. Hamilton | 1944 | 1948 |
Harold Jones | 1948 | 1952 |
Kindall Paulk | 1952 | 1954 |
Lloyd Thomas | 1954 | 1956 |
K.C. Spell | 1956 | 1960 |
Kenneth Johnson | 1960 | 1962 |
John Gavin | 1962 | 1964 |
Winston Wallander | 1964 | 1966 |
R.C. "Dick" Rancier | 1966 | 1970 |
R. Kenneth Hill | 1970 | 1974 |
Max Kruger | 1974 | 1978 |
Kenneth Hill | 1978 | 1984 |
Gary Cook | 1982 | 1986 |
Charles Harper | 1986 | 1988 |
Perry Goolsby | 1988 | 1990 |
Michael Lam | 1990 | 1996 |
Kay Yeager | 1996 | 2000 |
Jerry Lueck | 2000 | 2002 |
William Altman | 2002 | 2005 |
Arthur B. Williams | 2005 | 2005 |
Lanham Lyne | 2005 | 2010 |
Glenn Barham | 2010 | 2016[44] |
Stephen Santellana | 2016 | present |
Wichita Falls is located in the 69th district of the Texas House of Representatives. Lanham Lyne, a Republican, represented the district from 2011 to 2013; he was the mayor of Wichita Falls from 2005 to 2010. When Lyne declined to seek a second term in 2012, voters chose another Republican, James Frank. Wichita Falls is located in the 30th district of the Texas Senate. Craig Estes, a Republican, had held the senate seat since 2001, until Pat Fallon won election in 2018. Wichita Falls is part of Texas's 13th congressional district for the U.S. House of Representatives. Ronny Jackson, a Republican, has held this seat since 2021. The 13th District is considered the most conservative district in the country, according to the Cook Political Report 2018.
The Texas Department of Criminal Justice James V. Allred Unit is located in Wichita Falls, 4 mi (6.4 km) northwest of downtown Wichita Falls. The prison is named for former Governor James V. Allred, a Democrat and a native of Bowie, Texas, who lived early in his career in Wichita Falls.[45] The United States Postal Service operates the Wichita Falls Post Office, the Morningside Post Office, the Bridge Creek Post Office, and the Sheppard Air Force Base Post Office.[46]
Public primary and secondary education is covered by the following school districts: Wichita Falls Independent School District, City View Independent School District, Burkburnett Independent School District, and Iowa Park Consolidated Independent School District.[47] Several private and parochial schools operate in the city, as does an active home-school community. Many of the local elementary schools participate in the Head Start program for preschool-aged children.
Two schools in the Wichita Falls ISD participate in the International Baccalaureate programs. Hirschi High School offers the IB Diploma Programme, and G.H. Kirby Junior High School for the Middle Years Programme. Other public high schools are Wichita Falls High School and S. H. Rider High School (Wichita Falls ISD) and City View High School (City View ISD).
By 1879 the first school was established. The first public school was a log cabin structure established in the 1880s; in 1885 it was replaced with a former courthouse. Wichita Falls High School opened in 1890. That year a school district was created, but problems with the law allowing its establishment meant it was dissolved in 1894 and the city provided schooling until the second establishment of a school district in 1900. In 1908 the Texas Legislature issued a charter for WFISD.[48]
There is a school for German children, Deutsche Schule Sheppard (DSS).[49]
Wichita Falls is home to Midwestern State University, an accredited four-year college in the Texas Tech University System and the only independent liberal arts college in Texas offering both bachelor's and master's degrees.[50]
Vernon College is the designated community college for all of Wichita County.[51] A local branch nearby offers two-year degrees, certificate programs, and workforce development programs
Wayland Baptist University, offering both bachelor's and master's degrees, has its main branch located in Plainview, Texas.
Wichita Falls is the western terminus for Interstate 44. U.S. Highways leading to or through Wichita Falls include 287, 277, 281, and 82. State Highway 240 ends at Wichita Falls and State Highway 79 runs through it. Wichita Falls has one of the largest freeway mileages for a city of its size[citation needed] as a result of a 1954 bond issue approved by city and county voters to purchase rights-of-way for several expressway routes through the city and county, the first of which was opened in the year 1958 as an alignment of U.S. 287 from Eighth Street at Broad and Holliday Streets northwestward across the Wichita River and bisecting Lucy and Scotland Parks to the Old Iowa Park Road, the original U.S. 287 alignment.[citation needed] That was followed by other expressway links including U.S. 82–287 east to Henrietta (completed in the year 1968), U.S. 281 south toward Jacksboro (completed 1969), U.S. 287 northwest to Iowa Park and Electra (opened 1962), Interstate 44 north to Burkburnett and the Red River (opened 1964), and Interstate 44 from Old Iowa Park Road to U.S. 287/Spur 325 interchange on the city's north side along with Spur 325 from I-44/U.S. 287 to the main gate of Sheppard Air Force Base (both completed as a single project in 1960). However, cross-country traffic for many years had to contend with several ground-level intersections and traffic lights over Holliday and Broad Streets near the downtown area for about 13 blocks between connecting expressway links until a new elevated freeway running overhead was completed in 2001.[citation needed]
Efforts to create an additional freeway along the path of Kell Boulevard for U.S. 82–277 began in 1967 with the acquisition of right-of-way that included a former railroad right-of-way and the first project including construction of the present frontage roads completed in 1977, followed by freeway lanes, overpasses, and on/off ramps in 1989 from just east of Brook Avenue west to Kemp Boulevard; similar projects west from Kemp to Barnett Road in 2001 followed by Barnett Road west past FM 369 in 2010 to tie in which a project now underway to transform U.S. 277 into a continuous four-lane expressway between Wichita Falls and Abilene.[52]
The city operates a bus system, Falls Ride, which runs on an hourly schedule with seven routes (except on Sundays, when only one route is in operation).[53]
Greyhound Lines provides intercity bus service to other locations served by Greyhound via its new terminal at the Wichita Falls Travel Center located at Fourth and Scott in downtown.[54] Skylark Van Service shuttles passengers to and from Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport on several runs during the day all week long.[55]
The Wichita Falls Municipal Airport is served by American Eagle, with four flights daily to the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport. The Kickapoo Downtown Airport and the Wichita Valley Airport serve smaller, private planes.
They say business and people have been moving westward in Wichita Falls ever since the city was born on Sept. 27, 1872. The birthplace of the city-the corner of Seventh and Ohio Streets, where the original town lot sale was held – is once again blossoming with renovated apartment buildings, new businesses and increased traffic.
But when the building was done, investors discovered the skyscraper was only 30 feet tall, 18 feet deep and 10 feet wide. And of the reportedly $200,000 sunk into the skyscraper's construction – well, that was plainly gone with the wind.
The Wichita Falls Landmark Commission wants to more than double the size of the downtown historic district in an effort to slow the loss of buildings that proclaim the city's heritage. Commission members voted unanimously Thursday for expanding the district to include a total of 77 buildings on Indiana and Ohio streets.
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