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SENATE RESOLUTION NO. 212
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WHEREAS, King Ranch, whose history spans more than 160 |
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years, has left an indelible imprint on the story of Texas, and |
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its renown has spread far beyond the borders of this state; and |
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WHEREAS, Richard King, the founder of the ranch, was a New |
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York native who had run away from an apprenticeship in Manhattan |
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as a child and later became a steamboat captain; in 1847, he |
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joined his friend Mifflin Kenedy on the Rio Grande, where they |
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ferried troops and supplies for the United States Army during the |
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Mexican War; both men remained on the border after the war's end |
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and became wealthy as steamboat entrepreneurs; and |
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WHEREAS, Ever on the alert for business opportunities, |
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King spied possibilities in the land lying between the Rio Grande |
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and the Nueces River, an area known variously as the Nueces Strip |
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and the Wild Horse Desert; in 1853 he and a partner, Gideon Lewis, |
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purchased in that area a 15,500-acre Mexican land grant known as |
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the Rincón de Santa Gertrudis; over the ensuing years, first with |
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Lewis, then with Kenedy, and ultimately as sole proprietor, he |
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continued to expand his ranch holdings, amassing one of the |
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largest spreads in Texas; and |
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WHEREAS, King quickly adapted to Spanish ranching culture; |
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while on a cattle-buying trip in Tamaulipas, he persuaded some |
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100 residents of the village of Cruillas to return with him to |
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Texas; they settled on the ranch and became known as los Kineños, |
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or "King's people"; over the years, their skills as horsemen and |
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as stockmen, skills that have been passed down through |
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generations of descendants, have contributed immeasurably to the |
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ranch's mystique and to its success; and |
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WHEREAS, In the years following the Civil War, King played |
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a prominent role in the emergence of the Texas cattle industry; |
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longhorns bearing his Running W brand were among the first to be |
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trailed north to the railheads in Kansas and to new ranges in the |
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American West; in addition, King was among the earliest ranchers |
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to fence his land, to undertake the large-scale raising of |
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livestock, and to follow a program of scientific breeding; and |
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WHEREAS, Richard King died in 1885, leaving his widow, |
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Henrietta King, to preserve and enlarge the ranch he had built; |
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Henrietta King had already proved capable of the task, as she had |
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largely overseen the ranch during the Civil War, while her |
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husband was engaged in transporting Confederate cotton across |
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the Rio Grande to Mexico; she appointed Robert Justus Kleberg, |
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their legal advisor, as ranch manager, and in 1886, Kleberg |
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became a member of the family with his marriage to the Kings' |
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daughter Alice; over the next three decades, Kleberg led in |
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eliminating a devastating cattle disease called Texas fever by |
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pioneering the use of cattle dipping vats; he also began the |
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breeding program that produced the world-famed Santa Gertrudis |
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beef cattle; and |
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WHEREAS, In the 20th century, King Ranch diversified into a |
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number of other areas; it began breeding and racing both quarter |
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horses and Thoroughbreds, and it claimed the 1946 Triple Crown |
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winner, Assault, and the 1950 Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes |
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winner, Middleground; the ranch also became involved in oil and |
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gas production and acquired interests in such industries as |
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timber and real estate; in addition, the ranch developed |
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large-scale hunting operations, both through leasing land to |
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hunters and by providing guided public hunts; today, King Ranch |
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has become noted as a leader in environmental stewardship, game |
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management, and wildlife conservation; strongly supportive of |
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education, it has endowed a professorship in the McCombs School |
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of Business at The University of Texas at Austin and contributed |
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generously to institutes for ranch management and wildlife |
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research at Texas A&M University--Kingsville; and |
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WHEREAS, King Ranch now encompasses 825,000 acres, spread |
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across six counties; in 1966, it was listed on the National |
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Register of Historic Places; and |
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WHEREAS, Throughout its history, King Ranch has been a |
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recognized innovator in ranching and livestock practices, and as |
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awareness grows of the need to live in harmony with the natural |
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world, this legendary ranch is playing a vital role in saving the |
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rich natural heritage of the Lone Star State; now, therefore, be it |
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RESOLVED, That the Senate of the State of Texas, 84th |
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Legislature, hereby recognize February 26, 2015, as King Ranch |
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Day at the State Capitol and extend to the ranch's owners, |
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managers, and staff sincere best wishes for continued success; |
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and, be it further |
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RESOLVED, That an official copy of this Resolution be |
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prepared for King Ranch as an expression of high regard from the |
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Texas Senate. |
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Lucio |
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________________________________ |
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President of the Senate |
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I hereby certify that the |
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above Resolution was adopted by |
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the Senate on February 23, 2015. |
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________________________________ |
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Secretary of the Senate |
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________________________________ |
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Member, Texas Senate |