Discover What's Great In Tyler
Food & Drink
2647 Crow Rd. • 903-630-7725
6106 S. Broadway • 903-509-2639
1725 W. SW Loop 323 • 903-630-8370
1601 W SW Loop 323 • 903-561-8065
6623 S Broadway Ave. • 903-630-6413
1246 NNW Loop 323 • 903-561-2400
212 Grande Ste. C-106 • 903-534-0265
108 W Erwin St. • 903-531-2415
5106 Old Bullard Rd. • 903-534-0161
8374 Paluxy Dr. • 757-744-4296
Bud Jones Bayou
500 E Erwin St • 903-593-5488
Cantina Laredo
7428 Old Jacksonville Hwy • 903-630-5423
Chiangmai Thai Kitchen
8970 S. Broadway Ave • 903-534-8424
Coyote Sam’s
5424 Old Jacksonville • 903-509-4222
Dakota’s Steak & Chop House
5377 S. Broadway • 903-581-6700
Daniel Boone’s Grill & Tavern
1920 E. Southeast Loop 323 • 903-595-2228
Don Juan on the Square
113 E. Erwin St • 903-526-0702
El Charro on the Ridge
6899 Oak Hill Blvd. • 903-617-6022
ETX Brewing Company
221 S. Broadway Ave • 903-630-7720
FD’s Grill House
8934 S. Broadway Ste 494 • 903-630-7683
First Watch
150 E. 9th St • 903-592-3447
Foundry Coffee House
202 S. Broadway Ave • 903-944-7805
Fuzion Eleven
5377 S. Broadway Ave • 903-526-0655
Garage Bar
418 E. Erwin St • 903-617-7713
Go Fish Modern Japanese Kitchen
127 W. SW Loop 323 • 903-747-8662
Great American Grill
220 E. Grande Blvd • 903-509-1166
Greenberg Smoked Turkey
221 McMurrey Dr • 903-595-0725
Grub Burger Bar
6519 S. Broadway Ave • 903-508-4714
Gusterz Gourmet Pop
8934 S. Broadway Ave #432 • 903-581-7677
Happy’s Fish House
2202 E. 5th St • 903-944-7921
Honey Tree
211 Shelley Dr • 903-561-5329
Kiepersol Estates Winery
4120 FM 344 E • 903-894-8995
King Tortas
319 N. Beckham Ave • 903-593-1609
Lago Del Pino
11468 CR 1134 • 903-561-5246
Loggins Restaurant
137 S. Glenwood Blvd • 903-595-5022
Lola’s Handcrafted Sandwiches
16700 FM 2493 #600 • 903-630-5652
Marco’s Pizza
7924 S. Broadway Ave • 903-561-5550
Margarita’s Mexican Restaurant
1327 E. Front St • 903-593-5954
Mario’s Italian Restaurant
7916 S. Broadway #200 • 903-581-2309
Martinez Tortilla Factory
1037 E. Erwin St • 903-533-1212
Moocho Burrito
200 W. Erwin St • 903-595-8920
Nektar
8934 S. Broadway Ave #402 • 903-224-8300
Oliveto Italian Bistro
3709 Troup Hwy • 903-581-2678
Piada Italian Street Food
8942 S. Broadway Ave
Portofino’s Italian Restaurant
3320 Troup Hwy Ste 170 • 903-533-1000
Razzoo’s Cajun Cafe
7011 S. Broadway Ave • 903-534-2922
Republic Icehouse
3807 University Blvd • 903-504-5860
Rick’s on the Square
104 W. Erwin • 903-531-2415
Roast Social Kitchen
1125 E. 5th St • 903-202-0295
Rose City Drafthouse
5393 S. Broadway Ave • 903-561-2739
Rudy’s Country Store & BBQ
1410 S. SW Loop 323 • 903-597-8391
Sister2Sister Cookies
322 E. SE Loop 323 #300 • 903-561-7733
Skyline Cafe
150 Airport Dr • 903-593-7455
Sola Bread Co.
2453 Earl Cambell Pkwy • 903-316-9648
South Tyler Speakeasy
16884 FM Rd 2493 • 903-534-1884
Spring Creek BBQ
5810 S. Broadway • 903-561-5695
Strada Cafe
302 E. Front St • 903-944-7744
Summerfield’s Club
5701 S. Broadway Ave • 903-561-5800
Sushi Guy
3979 University Blvd • 903-747-3450
Sweet Sue’s Family Restaurant
3350 S. Southwest Loop 323 • 903-581-5464
Taj Mahal
5221 S. Broadway Ave Ste 8 • 903-363-9202
Texas De Brazil
2376 Dueling Oaks Dr Ste 100 • 903-231-9000
The Porch at ETX
221 S. Broadway Ave • 903-630-7720
Traditions
6205 S. Broadway • 903-534-1111
True Vine Brewing Co.
2453 Earl Campbell Pkwy • 903-600-0124
Twisted Root Burger
4601 S. Broadway Ave • 903-630-0771
Villagio Del Vino
4803 Old Bullard Rd Ste 102 • 903-534-8466
Wasabi Sushi Bar
5617 Donnybrook • 903-939-0211
Whatsub Banh Mi
7924 S. Broadway Ave Ste 500 • 903-630-6476
Zoe’s Kitchen
8926 S. Broadway Ave Ste 104 • 903-939-0925
Shop
903 Handmade
253 S. Broadway Ave • 903-630-7823
8942 S. Broadway Ave., Suite 132 • 903-561-8822
Brands and Threads
257 S. Broadway Ave
Bridgette’s
4815 Old Bullard Rd • 903-561-3136
Found Objects
117 W. Front St
Moonrivers Naturals
243 S. Broadway Ave • 903-630-6414
Moss-Where Flowers Are Fair
237 S. Broadway Ave • 903-787-8822
Spinout
7266 Old Jacksonville Hwy • 903-526-2226
Places / Events / Things To Do
1859 Goodman-Legrand Home & Museum
624 N. Broadway Ave • 903-531-1286
Bergfield Park
1510 S. College Ave • 903-531-1370
Bonner-Whitaker McClendon House
806 W. Houston St • 903-592-3533
Caldwell Zoo
2203 Martin Luther King Blvd • 903-593-0121
Camp Ford Historic Park
6500 U.S. 271 • 903-592-5993
Center for Earth & Space Science Education
1411 E. Lake St • 903-510-2312
Children’s Park
110 E. Dobbs St • 903-939-1597
Discovery Science Place
308 N. Broadway Ave • 903-533-8011
Faulkner Park
410 Cumberland Rd • 903-531-1370
Historic Aviation Memorial Museum
150 Airport Dr • 903-526-1945
Legrand Rose Garden
624 N. Broadway Ave • 903-531-1286
Pelle Legna Vineyards
18655 CR 418 • 903-521-6266
Smith County Historical Society
125 S. College Ave • 903-592-5993
Texas State Railroad
535 Park Road 76 • 855-632-7729
Tiger Creek Wildlife Refuge
17552 Farm to Market 14 • 903-858-1008
Tyler Municipal Rose Garden
1900 W. Front St • 903-531-1212
Tyler Museum of Art
1300 S. Mahon Ave • 903-595-1001
Tyler Rose Museum
420 Rose Park Dr • 903-597-3130
Waterpark at the Villages
18270 Singing Wood Ln • 903-534-8400
Merchandise
Tyler Fast Facts
• Founded: 1846
• County: Smith
• Population: 104,991 (est)
• Metro Area Population: 209,714
• Know As: The Rose Capital of America
• Record High Temp: 115
• Record Low Temp: – 3
• Famous People:
Sandy Duncan (Actress)
Louie Gohmert (Congressman)
Earl Campball (Football)
Patrick Mahomes (Football)
Map of Tyler
History of Tyler
Tyler is the county seat of Smith County, located in east-central Texas, United States. The city of Tyler has long been Smith County’s major economic, educational, financial, medical, and cultural hub. The city is named for John Tyler, the tenth President of the United States.
Tyler had a population of 96,900 in 2010, according to the United States Census Bureau, and Tyler’s 2017 estimated population was 104,991. It is 100 miles (160 km) east-southeast of Dallas. Tyler is the principal city of the Tyler Metropolitan Statistical Area, which had a population of 209,714 in 2010, and is the regional center of the Tyler-Jacksonville combined statistical area, which had a population of 260,559 in 2010.
Tyler is known as the “Rose Capital of America” (also the “Rose City” and the “Rose Capital of the World”), a nickname it earned from a long history of rose production, cultivation, and processing. It is home to the largest rose garden in the United States, a 14-acre public garden complex that boasts over 38,000 rose bushes of at least 500 different varieties. The Tyler Rose Garden is also home to the annual Texas Rose Festival, attracting tourists by the thousands each year in mid-October. Tyler is also home to the Caldwell Zoo and Broadway Square Mall.
In 1985, the international Adopt-a-Highway movement originated in Tyler. After appeals by local Texas Department of Transportation officials, the local Civitan chapter adopted a 2-mi (3-km) stretch of U.S. Highway 69 to maintain. Drivers and other motorists traveling on this segment of US-69 (between Tyler and nearby Lindale) will notice brown road signs that read, “First Adopt-A-Highway in the World.”
Legal recognition of Tyler was initiated by an act of the state legislature on April 11, 1846. Texas created Smith County and authorized a county seat. The first plat designated a 28-block town site centered by a main square, located within a 100-acre tract acquired by Smith County on February 6, 1847. The new town was named for President John Tyler, who advocated for annexation of Texas by the United States. A log building on the north side of the square functioned as courthouse and public meeting hall until it was displaced by a brick courthouse in 1852. On January 29, 1850, Tyler was incorporated. Early religious and social institutions included the First Baptist church and a Methodist church, a Masonic Lodge and an Odd Fellows Lodge, and Tyler’s first newspaper.
Though Tyler’s early economy (1847–1873) was based on agriculture, it was also well-diversified during this period. Logging was a second major industry, while complementary manufacturing included metal working, milling wood, and leather tanning. As the seat of Smith County, the town also benefited from government activity. The local agricultural economy relied on slave labor before the Civil War. By 1860, Tyler held over 1,000 enslaved persons, which represented 35 percent of the town’s population.
So there was strong support for secession and the Confederacy within Tyler, as a high percentage of its residents voted for secession and many of its men joined the Confederate Army. The town was secure enough for the Confederacy to establish the largest ordnance plant in Texas. In 1870, the first bank in Tyler was established by Bonner and Williams. Though both the Texas and Pacific Railroad and the International Railroad (Texas) eschewed routes through Tyler, the town gained an important rail connection when the Houston and Great Northern built a branch line in 1874.
Toward the end of the nineteenth century, fruit orchards emerged as an important new business in the regional economy. Eighty percent of the county agricultural revenue derived from cotton as it persisted as the dominant crop in the first decades of the twentieth century. Peaches were the principal fruit crop as the county fruit tree inventory surpassed one million by 1900. Disease struck the peach trees, though, and local farmers moved toward growing roses by the 1920s. Twenty years later, most of the US rose supply originated in the Tyler area.