Details for The King Ranch

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5273002949

Data

Marker Number 2949
Atlas Number 5273002949
Marker Title The King Ranch
Index Entry King Ranch, The
Address
City Kingsville
County Kleberg
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 608998
UTM Northing 3044444
Subject Codes ranches/ranching; cattle, cattle industry topics
Marker Year 1977
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Visitors center, King Ranch, SH 141, west side, Kingsville
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Richard King (1824-1885), a Rio Grande steamboat captain, bought two Spanish land grants on Santa Gertrudis Creek and founded the legendary King Ranch in 1853. He brought longhorn cattle from Mexico and battled droughts and cattle thieves to build a profitable ranch. Operating first in partnership with G. K. ("Legs") Lewis and later with Mifflin Kenedy and James Walworth, King became sole owner in the late 1860s. During the Civil War (1861-1865), the King Ranch was a way-station for Confederate cotton going to Mexico. Herds carrying King's famous "Running W" brand followed the cattle trails to northern markets in the 1870s. After King died, his widow Henrietta (Chamberlain) (1832-1925) named as ranch manager Robert Justus Kleberg (1853-1932), who later married her daughter Alice Gertrudis King (1862-1944). The ranch became less isolated in the early 1900s, when the railroad arrived and the town of Kingsville was settled. Constant improvement of herds by King-Kleberg descendants produced a new breed of cattle, the Santa Gertrudis, and fine quarter horses and thoroughbreds. Petroleum was discovered on ranch property in the 1930s. Today the King ranch has grown to almost one million acres in south Texas, plus holdings in other states and nations.
ATLAS_NUM=5273002949

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