Travel + Leisure Readers' 15 Favorite City Hotels in Texas of 2024
It's cliche but true: Everything really is bigger in Texas, including some great, big, stylish, and enormously luxurious hotels that are waiting to welcome you. And while there's plenty of land to ...
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This Texas city is state's No. 1 destination for a hotel getaway
Finding a picturesque place to stay on your next vacation to or within the Lone Star State just got easier. Condé Nast Traveler recently released its list of the 15 best hotels in Texas, a majority of ...
READ MORE: San Antonio Express-News
Need a spa day? These are Texas' top 5 resort hotels in 2025, Travel+Leisure readers say
You don't need to look far for the ideal spa day! The state's five best resort hotels are in or near its five biggest cities.
READ MORE: Austin American-Statesman on MSN
5 Stylish Hotels for City Lovers
New accommodations around the world allow you to soak up urban culture and immerse yourself in hotel creature comforts. By Stephanie Rosenbloom It’s a new year — why not check out a new hotel in a ...
READ MORE: The New York Times
How do you pronounce Waxahachie? 21 Texas city names you might be saying wrong
From Bexar to Waxahachie, here's how to pronounce 21 Texas place names that often trip people up.
READ MORE: Austin American-Statesman on MSN
A Texas city was already struggling with racial divisions. Then came a bitter murder trial.
Frisco is one of the nation’s fastest-growing cities. That growth — and a partisan election season — has fueled racism and ...
READ MORE: The Washington Post
Texas city honors once-forgotten drag queen with new historical marker
The Texas native was one of the most acclaimed acrobats and drag performers of the time.
READ MORE: Chron on MSN
A third Texas city is running out of water as city officials blame Corpus Christi
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. According to a Monday news release from the city of Three Rivers, a rural Texas city located approximately 70 miles northwest of ...
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Hundreds killed, thousands injured in Texas City disaster of 1947
HOUSTON (KTRK) -- It was on April 16, 1947 that one of the largest non-nuclear explosions to have ever occurred rocked the Texas City port, killing hundreds of people including 28 members of the Texas ...
READ MORE: abc13
Texas City Disaster devastated community, changed way industry was regulated
Early on the morning of April 16, 1947, Fred Atwood Jr. and his wife, Yvonne, awoke to fire alarms sounding down at the docks in Texas City. They ate breakfast and gave their 6-month-old son, Kent, a ...
READ MORE: Houston Chronicle