Care Homes for Dementia in Cooper, TX
Dementia Care Facilities in Cooper, TX
Who are you searching for?
AlzheimersNet is your comprehensive guide to memory care in Cooper, TX. Memory care facilities provide housing and care for older adults with Alzheimer's disease and other types of dementia. Memory care empowers seniors who have memory loss to stay as active and engaged as possible, while living in a dignified, comfortable and supervised setting. Our local Senior Living Advisors are expert in dementia care in Cooper, TX and surrounding areas. After an initial assessment, your advisor will prepare a list of memory care facilities that most closely match your loved one's unique imperatives for care and living preferences, as well as your family's budget.
Memory Care Costs in Cooper, TX
Price varies widely depending on location, care required, size of the resident's living space and the level of luxury at the community. The price of memory care in Cooper ranges from $ to $ per month, with an average cost of $.
Cities near Cooper, TX offering memory care options
Facts about Cooper
Cooper is represented by City Council Republican Party, U.S. Congress Ralph Hall, TX Senate Larry Phillips, and Mayor Bob Deuell.
The city of Cooper is the county seat of Delta County, in the U.S. state of Texas. Located between the north and south forks of the Sulphur River, Cooper is the largest settlement within Delta County. As of the U.S. Census of 2010, Cooper had a population of 1,969.First inhabited by native people, Cooper was founded around 1870, at the same time that Delta County was established. Cooper grew rapidly and it quickly became the center of local events. The city’s economy relied primarily on agricultural farming and the shipping of local goods. In the mid-1890s, a railroad line was built through the city, assisting in Cooper’s growth. The city continued to grow through the 1910s, and into the early 1920s. In 1926, however, the region’s cotton crop failed, devastating the local economy. Many businesses were forced to close, including the railroad, and the city’s population plummeted. Although Cooper began to recover during the mid-1930s, many people who left did not return, and the city never fully recovered. The local economy continued to rely on the growing of cotton as the main economy into the 1960s, until it began to shift to wheat growing in the early 1970s. The population of Cooper has been on a slow decline since the 1970s.Cooper currently has no sites listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The city’s economy still relies largely on agriculture. Cooper is located on the eastern edge of the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex a large, twelve-county metropolitan area, one of the most populated in the country.
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