Donald Trump has found a home in Texas after all.

After Trump's team had reached out to three different venues in North Texas and had been rebuffed, the presumptive nominee's Texas swing disappeared from his official schedule earlier today.

But now, Trump will appear tomorrow night at Gilly's in Dallas, in the venue's South Side Ballroom, which can fit 3,800 people, a much smaller crowd than what Trump entertained in Dallas before.

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Donald Trump was supposed to head to Texas after today's rally in Atlanta, Georgia, but two planned rallies - in Dallas and Houston - have disappeared from his schedule after venue problems were reported

The presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump was expected to make a three city swing in Texas and hold rallies in Dallas and Houston and hold a fundraiser in San Antonio too

According to the Dallas Morning News, Gilly's is located conveniently near the Dallas police headquarters, as protests are expected at tomorrow's 7 p.m. event.

Trump's troubles in Texas were first reported by the Dallas Morning News.

The newspaper said that Trump's campaign organizers were 'scrambling' to find a venue that could accommodate a large and safe Trump rally.

Grand Prairie, a town just to the west of Dallas, declined to host a rally in the Verizon Theater, a city spokeswoman confirmed to the Dallas Morning News.

The theater sits 6,350 people and was not large enough for the Trump event, the spokeswoman added.

'It's not only providing security for the rally and itself, it is providing security for the unknown,' Lyle Gensler, the Grand Prairie police spokesman, also told the paper, explaining that to handle a Trump rally the department would have needed help from neighboring cities.

Irving, Texas, the municipality directly north of Grand Prairie, which is near the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, also couldn't accommodate a request from the Trump team.

The Trump campaign reached out to city officials just 48 hours before the event, which wasn't enough lead time to get something off the ground.

The police and city officials decided there wasn't enough time to 'ensure the safety and security of those attending such a large-scale, high-profile event,' city spokesman Susan Rose, told the Dallas Morning News via a prepared statement.

The Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center in Dallas also declined an offer to host Trump.

Several North Texas Hispanic groups were planning to protest at the Trump events, which has become par for the course at the Republican's rallies.

Trump visited the area in September and took over the downtown Dallas' American Airlines Center, the home of Mark Cuban's Dallas Mavericks.

That event attracted a crowd of 15,000 people, though didn't break the record crowd that now-President Barack Obama brought forth in 2008 of 17,000 people.

Trump was also expected to attend high-dollar fundraisers in Texas on Friday too.

There's a luncheon in San Antonio planned with tickets ranging from $500 for young professionals to $250,000 for couples in the 'chairman's circle.'

Those six-figure packages include 10 tickets to the luncheon and four tickets to the photo session and VIP conversation with Trump, according to the San Antonio Express- News.

Friday evening, Trump is due in Houston for a dinner fundraiser hosted by Tony Buzbee, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry's lawyer in his abuse of power case.