KRUM, TEXAS. Krum
is on Farm Road 1173 seven miles northwest of
Denton in west central Denton County. The Gulf,
Colorado and Santa Fe Railway ran a line through
western Denton County in the mid-1880s. At that
time the company bought 200 acres, platted a
townsite, and named the community for one of its
employees, A. R. Krum. The community
reported a population of seventy-five in 1892,
and by 1900 it was thriving, with a number of
businesses, four churches, and a school. In 1900
the railroad shipped at least half a million
bushels of wheat, prompting the claim that Krum
was the "largest inland grain market in the
world." In 1905 the Flour Mill and Elevator
Company and three other elevator companies were
operating at the community. The mill burned in
1915, and changing storage and marketing
practices eventually closed the remaining
elevators. Krum's growth and prosperity
continued until about 1925, when its population
reached 750. The community declined as cars and
trucks began carrying trade to larger markets
and as young people departed for college or city
jobs. With the Great Depressionqv
years the town's population level dropped below
300, then stayed low in the post-World War IIqv
period, ranging between 300 and 400 until the
1970s, when the sprawl of the Dallas-Fort Worth
metropolitan area northward brought suburban
homeseekers in increasing numbers. Access from
Krum to Interstate Highway 35 made commuting to
city jobs convenient, and the community's
population rose to 605 by 1978, to 917 by 1982,
and to 1,542 by 1990.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Kathleen
E. and Clifton R. St. Clair, eds., Little
Towns of Texas (Jacksonville, Texas: Jayroe
Graphic Arts, 1982).

Ruth Knox Hilliard
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