Carlisle
Elementary School was opened in the fall of 1984. It was
named a Blue Ribbon School during the 1997-1998 school year.
Carlisle is the youngest school ever to receive this national
honor. In 1994, Carlisle was recognized by the US Department
of Education for excellence in drug prevention. In 1996 the
school began it's very successful Mentoring
Program.
The school is named for Henry Bascom Carlisle. He was born
in August, 1855 in Tennessee. Mr. Carlisle married Dona
Norton, and in 1888 they moved to Denison and a year later to
Plano. They had four children: Manley, Idalee, Julia, and
Willie Glynne.

Mr.
Carlisle started a grocery business located on the east end of
Mechanic Street. In this store, there was always a cracker
barrel open, a hoop of cheese with a cutter, and a pickle barrel.
He bought produce, such as watermelons, by the railroad carload,
and sold them right off the car. Squawking chickens were
sold live and weighed on big scales. They also sold grain,
hay, and cotton seed.
“Chiney”
Williams delivered groceries in the small wooden wagon pulled
by two mules stabled behind the Carlisle house, and children came
by the store after school for a pickle or cookie. This was
a favorite place for everyone when they came to town. By
the mid 1890’s, his brother JM Carlisle joined him in business,
and the store changed the name to Plano Grocery Company.
In
the 1920’s, Willie joined his father’s business also. After
forty-five years of selling on credit, the unpaid bills owed him
and the Depression forced him out of business. Mr. Carlisle
died in 1934 at the age of 78.
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