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  • By a 4-1 vote, Fannin County Commissioners Court approved the creation of the Fannin County Tax Abatement Committee and appointed seven members to the committee: Tylene Gamble, Chief Appraiser at Fannin Central Appraisal District (or Nita Bankston if Gamble is unable to serve), Derek Moore, Fannin County Treasurer-elect; William Myers, President of BEDCO; Dale McQueen; John Skotnik, Criminal District Attorney; Alicia Whipple, Fannin County Auditor, and whichever commissioner's precinct that would be impacted by the business requesting an abatement.
  • Craig International announced today it has won the bid to redevelop the former Globe Life corporate headquarters located at 3700 S. Stonebridge Drive in McKinney, TX. Situated on nearly 58 acres, the project includes approximately 300,789 square feet of leasable office space, strategically positioned along the border of McKinney and Frisco in one of the nation’s fastest-growing economic corridors.
  • In the continued development of a rare new, ground-up retail property, Big V Property Group and The Seitz Group will celebrate the groundbreaking of Rosamond Town Center in Anna, Texas, on Tuesday, June 30 at 10:00 a.m. at the southeast corner of Rosamond Parkway and Hwy. 75. The 355,826-square-foot, open-air center will be anchored by Academy Sports + Outdoors, Aldi, Burlington, EOS Fitness, Hobby Lobby, HomeGoods, PetSmart and T.J. Maxx, and will feature several outparcels and specialty stores. (photo credit: Big V Property Group)
  • As part of our America 250 celebrations, the Sam Rayburn House State Historic Site is having a free come-and-go program on June 19 from 4:00 – 6:00 p.m. This program, called Civics and Democracy, will inform visitors about civics, democracy, voting, and volunteering. We hope to educate people of every age about how these ideas work and how people can support their community.
  • The Bonham City Council agenda was once again filled with topics related to the city's growth and development. They tabled topics related to the development around Legacy Ridge Country Club and approved changes to the reinvestment zone for the downtown and commerical cooridors.
  • 1692 – Salem witch trials: Bridget Bishop is hanged at Gallows Hill near Salem, Massachusetts, for "certaine Detestable Arts called Witchcraft and Sorceries." Bridget Bishop (née Magnus; c. 1632 – 10 June 1692) was a midwife and the first person executed for witchcraft during the Salem witch trials in 1692. The Salem witch trials were a series of hearings and prosecutions of people accused of witchcraft in colonial Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693. More than 200 people were accused. Thirty people were found guilty, nineteen of whom were executed by hanging (fourteen women and five men). One other man, Giles Corey, died under torture after refusing to enter a plea, and at least five people died in the disease-ridden jails without trial. Although the accusations began in Salem Village (known today as Danvers), accusations and arrests were made in numerous towns beyond the village notably in Andover and Topsfield. The residency of many of the accused is now unknown; around 151 of those people are able to be traced back to twenty-five different New England communities. The grand juries and trials for this capital crime were conducted by a Court of Oyer and Terminer in 1692 and by a Superior Court of Judicature in 1693, both held in Salem Town (the regional center for Salem Village), where the hangings also took place. It was the deadliest witch hunt in the history of colonial North America. Fourteen other women and two men were executed in Massachusetts and Connecticut during the 17th century. The Salem witch trials only came to an end when serious doubts began to arise among leading clergymen about the validity of the spectral evidence that had been used to justify so many of the convictions, and due to the sheer number of those accused, "including several prominent citizens of the colony." In the years after the trials, "several of the accusers – mostly teen-age girls – admitted that they had fabricated their charges." In 1702, the General Court of Massachusetts declared the trials "unlawful," and in 1711 the colonial legislature annulled the convictions, passing a bill "mentioning 22 individuals by name" and reversing their attainders. The episode is one of colonial America's most notorious cases of mass hysteria. It was not unique, but a colonial manifestation of the much broader phenomenon of witch trials in the early modern period, which took the lives of tens of thousands in Europe. In America, Salem's events have been used in political rhetoric and popular literature as a vivid cautionary tale about the dangers of isolation, religious extremism, false accusations, and lapses in due process. Many historians consider the lasting effects of the trials to have been highly influential in the history of the United States. According to historian George Lincoln Burr, "the Salem witchcraft was the rock on which the [New England] theocracy shattered."