Explore Orange County, Texas with this interactive street and satellite map. Browse all 10 cities and towns in Orange County below.
| County | Orange |
| State | Texas (TX) |
| County Seat | Orange |
| Country | United States of America |
| Latitude | 30.129293 |
| Longitude | -93.867893 |
| Cities & Towns | 10 |
| Area Codes | 281, 469, 972 |
Orange County unfolds along the Sabine River, a boundary both literal and figurative, separating it from Louisiana. The terrain here is a soft, yielding landscape, where the humid air often carries the scent of pine and damp earth. Eastward, the land dips and rises with a gentle, wooded character, hinting at the greater piney woods beyond. To the west, the terrain flattens, leading toward the vast agricultural plains. The Sabine Lake, a tidal estuary, forms a significant natural border to the south, its brackish waters a meeting place for fresh and salt, where the land finally yields to the Gulf's influence. This proximity to water shapes the very way the land breathes, a constant ebb and flow that defines the county's edges.
The roots of Orange County run deep into the soil of early American expansion, established by settlers drawn to its fertile lands and timber resources. The Sabine River served as a vital artery for commerce and communication, bringing a steady stream of travelers and pioneers. Its formation was a deliberate act, a formalization of community in a region increasingly defined by its natural bounty. The county seat, established early in its history, became a focal point, a place where governance met the practicalities of daily life, a hub around which neighborhoods and businesses coalesced, its growth mirroring the aspirations of those who first staked their claims here.
The economy of Orange County has long been tied to the resources that define it: timber and the bounty of the waterways. Today, industry continues to play a significant role, its presence a hum beneath the surface of everyday life. Yet, there is a quiet persistence to the place, a resilience that speaks of generations who have learned to live with the land. The light here, especially in the late afternoon, has a particular quality, a softening glow that seems to embrace the marsh grasses and the weathered wood of riverside structures. It is a place where the rhythm of work blends with the slower, more deliberate pace of life dictated by the seasons and the tides, a subtle character woven into the very air one breathes.
This page provides an interactive map of Orange County, Texas alongside links to detailed street maps for 10 cities and towns. The county seat is Orange. Each city and town map page includes live weather, local news and precise GPS coordinates.
Location data is sourced from the USGS GNIS database and verified by coordinates, not name matching alone.
| Page generated | June 2026 |
| Location data | USGS GNIS database; coordinates matched to 2020 US Census records |