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Plan a creative weekend in Bonham, Texas, for the 2026 Bonham Quilt Hop & Fiber Arts Show! While you are here, make time to experience the heart of Bonham. Enjoy our historic downtown, local shops, antique stores, museums, restaurants, and community spaces that make our town such a welcoming place to visit and call home. Come for the quilts. Stay for the history, shopping, food, and hometown hospitality.
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Nestled on the shores of Lake Grapevine near Dallas and Fort Worth and home to DFW International Airport, this vintage Texas destination offers exciting attractions, family-friendly activities and more than 20 hotels featuring refreshing swimming pools and lakeside adventures - all in a three-mile radius.
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Kaleidoscope Park, in partnership with the Ascendancy Group, is teaming up with current NFL player Sam Williams and former NFL player Charles Haley to host a free, family-friendly community event on Sunday, June 28, from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. at Kaleidoscope Park in Frisco. Benefiting The Tackle Tomorrow Foundation, this high-energy celebration invites families and children of all ages to enjoy a dynamic day of fun, featuring a live DJ, a foam bubble party, interactive stations, lawn games, a variety of local food trucks and vendors, and more.
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Antonio de Laurentis, Throne of Eucharistic Exposition. More than sixty objects given by European monarchs and rulers represent the height of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century craftsmanship. Many of the works in the exhibition have no equivalent anywhere else in the world and are in the US for the first—and possibly only—time.
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The Sam Bell Maxey House invites families to celebrate Father’s Day weekend with “Catapults and Clues,” an engaging afternoon of creativity, teamwork, and friendly competition on Saturday, June 20, from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. The event is designed for dads and their favorite sidekicks, featuring hands-on catapult building, a fun and interactive mystery to solve throughout the historic home, and light refreshments. Guests are welcome to come and go during the event.
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1954 – U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower signs a bill into law that places the words "under God" into the United States Pledge of Allegiance. Before February 1954, no endeavor to get the pledge officially amended had succeeded. The final successful push came from George MacPherson Docherty. Some American presidents honored Lincoln's birthday by attending services at the church Lincoln attended, New York Avenue Presbyterian Church by sitting in Lincoln's pew on the Sunday nearest February 12. On February 7, 1954, with President Dwight D. Eisenhower sitting in Lincoln's pew, Docherty, the church's pastor, delivered a sermon based on the Gettysburg Address entitled "A New Birth of Freedom." He argued that the nation's might lay not in arms but rather in its spirit and higher purpose. He noted that the Pledge's sentiments could be those of any nation: "There was something missing in the pledge, and that which was missing was the characteristic and definitive factor in the American way of life." He cited Lincoln's words "under God" as defining words that set the US apart from other nations. President Eisenhower had been baptized a Presbyterian very recently, just a year before. He responded enthusiastically to Docherty in a conversation following the service. Eisenhower acted on his suggestion the next day and on February 8, 1954, Rep. Charles Oakman (R–MI), introduced a bill to that effect. Congress passed the necessary legislation and Eisenhower signed the bill into law on Flag Day, June 14, 1954. Eisenhower said: "From this day forward, the millions of our school children will daily proclaim in every city and town, every village and rural school house, the dedication of our nation and our people to the Almighty.... In this way we are reaffirming the transcendence of religious faith in America's heritage and future; in this way we shall constantly strengthen those spiritual weapons which forever will be our country's most powerful resource, in peace or in war."


















