
Why is the Ellis County Rural Heritage Farm important to Texas and Ellis County and perhaps personal to YOU!
Somewhere in your family history, there may have been a small farm on the Blackland Prairie of Texas. Maybe your parents or grandparents talked about it. Maybe you remember visiting as a child. Or perhaps you only know it through a faded photograph — a farmhouse, a windmill turning in the Texas breeze, a team of mules, and a family whose hard work built the life you enjoy today.

Today, an intact farm of that era is rare — replaced by highways, subdivisions, commercial development, or just modernized. As they disappear, so do the stories, the skills, and the everyday experiences that defined those generations.
That’s why preserving an intact historic Blackland Prairie small family farm is so important.
The Ellis County Rural Heritage Farm keeps those memories alive — not just in photographs or written accounts, but in real, meaningful ways. Visitors can walk the same fields, see historic buildings, observe traditional farming practices, and experience firsthand how families lived during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Children and grandchildren can symbolically stand where their ancestors once stood and gain a deeper understanding of the lives that shaped their own.
For many families, this farm represents more than history — it represents their history.

By volunteering your time or contributing to the Ellis County Rural Heritage Farm Inc, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, you help ensure that the story of North Central Texas farm families remains visible, meaningful, and alive. You help future generations understand not just where they came from, but the values and perseverance that built their communities.
This farm is more than preserved land. It is a living tribute to your parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents. With your help, their story will continue to be told — not just remembered, but experienced — for generations to come. Don’t we owe it to them?
For more information on the Farm, visit https://ruralheritagefarm.org/.