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  • With budget deadlines approaching, all five members of Fannin County Commissioners Court were present for a special meeting held Tuesday, July 14, 2026.
  • Community Garden Kitchen, the only evening meal program in Collin County dedicated to serving residents facing food insecurity, proudly announced today that it has served 150,000 free meals since opening its doors in June 2022.
  • The Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) officials have announced upcoming nightly full closure of the US 75 northbound. The US 75 northbound mainlane closure will begin at 8:00 p.m. until 5:00 a.m. July 16 until July 17.
  • Joseph Deupree was born in Pickens County, Alabama on November 22, 1840. His grandfather Nathan Smith brought him to Texas in 1847, settling first in Harrison County. He moved with his uncles, Gideon Smith and Dr. J. C. Smith, to Fannin County in 1853. A good part of his youth was spent on the Smith farms on Red River.
  • Crews recently completed the top section of the lake's spillway, including the 13-foot-tall labyrinth weir that helps control how water leaves the lake and maintains its maximum water level. With that key piece in place, the intake structure gates were closed, and Lake Ralph Hall officially began to fill in early July. This milestone marks the end of major construction on the reservoir itself. How long it takes for the lake to fill depends on rainfall and could be three to five years. We will continue to share updates as the lake fills.
  • 1799 – The Rosetta Stone is found in the Egyptian village of Rosetta by French Captain Pierre-François Bouchard during Napoleon's Egyptian Campaign. The Rosetta Stone is a stele of granodiorite inscribed with three versions of a decree issued in 196 BC during the Ptolemaic dynasty of Egypt, on behalf of King Ptolemy V Epiphanes. The top and middle texts are in Ancient Egyptian using hieroglyphic and Demotic scripts, respectively, while the bottom is in Ancient Greek. The decree has only minor differences across the three versions, making the Rosetta Stone key to deciphering the Egyptian scripts. The stone was carved during the Hellenistic period and is believed to have originally been displayed within a temple, possibly at Sais. It was probably moved in late antiquity or during the Mamluk period, and was eventually used as building material in the construction of Fort Julien near the town of Rashid (Rosetta) in the Nile Delta. It was found there in July 1799 by French army officer Pierre-François Bouchard during France's invasion of Egypt. It was the first Ancient Egyptian bilingual text recovered in modern times, and it aroused widespread public interest with its potential to decipher this previously untranslated hieroglyphic script. Lithographic copies and plaster casts soon began circulating among European museums and scholars. When the British defeated the French, they took the stone to London under the terms of the Capitulation of Alexandria in 1801. Since 1802, it has been on public display at the British Museum almost continuously and it is the most visited object there. Study of the decree was already underway when the first complete translation of the Greek text was published in 1803. Jean-François Champollion announced the transliteration of the Egyptian scripts in Paris in 1822; it took longer still before scholars were able to read Ancient Egyptian inscriptions and literature confidently. Major advances in the decoding were recognition that the stone offered three versions of the same text (1799); that the Demotic text used phonetic characters to spell foreign names (1802); that the hieroglyphic text did so as well, and had pervasive similarities to the Demotic (1814); and that phonetic characters were also used to spell native Egyptian words (1822–1824). Three other fragmentary copies of the same decree were discovered later, and several similar Egyptian bilingual or trilingual inscriptions are now known, including three slightly earlier Ptolemaic decrees: the Decree of Alexandria in 243 BC, the Decree of Canopus in 238 BC, and the Memphis decree of Ptolemy IV, c. 218 BC. Though the Rosetta Stone is now known not to be unique, it was the essential key to the modern understanding of ancient Egyptian literature and civilization. The term Rosetta Stone is now used to refer to the essential clue to a new field of knowledge.