top of page

BOOKS

MURPHY

Donna Brumit Jenkins

With a 470-percent population spike during the last decade, Murphy, Texas, is the fastest-growing city in Collin County. Citizens are still drawn to the area just as the pioneers were. Murphy, first known as Maxwell and then Decatur, was once part of the Peters Colony empresario grant issued by the Republic of Texas in 1841. Carved out of the Blackland Prairie Region, the soil was rich and black, rainfall was abundant, the temperature was moderate, and the land was carpeted with tall grasses. Native trees, wild fruit, honey, game, fish, and wild turkey were plentiful. Trees were cut for homes, and prairie soils were plowed for crops. The arrival of the railroad in 1888 made it more convenient for farmers to transport crops and for local shopkeepers to operate their businesses, which left a lasting legacy in the community.

​

Murphy is a pictoral history of the City, carefully cultivated from historical photographs and documents, in addition to oral interviews of residents.

​

About the Author

Donna Brumit Jenkins has served as a librarian and history teacher. She is a member and co-chairman of the Collin County Historical Commission.   The County Marker Program is one of the projects on which she volunteers her time and research. Preserving the history of Collin County and Murphy, her hometown, is a passion. She interviewed citizens and gathered images from many private collections for the creation of this book.

​

ISBN-13-987-0-7385-8538-3

LIVING IN MURPHY, TEXAS

Bev Zavitz

Living in Murphy, Texas (Revised): 1845-1945 is a journey through history.

​

After discovering the "Decatur Graveyard" in 1984 which was covered in brambles and abandoned, the author began to explore and uncover the graves of many of Murphy's first pioneers.  Through research she began to put together and write the story of Murphy's early settlement.

​

About the Author

Bev Zavitz is a historian and former Murphy resident.

​

​

​

ISBN 0-9762325-0-2

bottom of page