King Ranch. The name is embroidered in the tapestry of Texas, rising from the sunbaked coastal plains in the infancy of the state itself. King Ranch is the inspiration of legends and speculation, tradition and history. Rawhide-tough through drought, Indian attacks, Civil War, and the Great Depression, among other trials, King Ranch is the star of Texas.Now the memoirs of Helen King Kleberg Alexander-Groves, the only child of Bob and Helen Kleberg, give a personal glimpse of life on the storied ranch of the Kings and the Klebergs. This intimate and compelling book chronicles not only the history of the ranch but also the life of Bob and Helen Kleberg, the first family of cattle ranching. From the Santa Gertrudis, the first cattle breed developed in America and the first breed recognized worldwide in over a century, to the Triple Crownâwinning Thoroughbred Assault, Bob and Helen Kleberg changed the ranching industry. The memoirs of "Helenita" open the door to the romance of Southwest cattle ranching, as well as the grit, glory, and inner workings of King Ranch in Texas and its ranches around the world.With over 200 photographs, some by Toni Frissell and many by her close friend and fellow photographer Helen Kleberg herself, this lavishly illustrated portrait includes accounts of the Klebergs' famous hospitality, extended not only to the celebrities who were entertained regularly but also to the Kineños, the loyal ranch hands first brought to King Ranch by Captain King. Hemingwayesque photos depict hunting adventures in the Texas brush countryâfor which the ranch is still famous. Bob and Helen Kleberg of King Ranch is a view from the center of the King Ranch legacy, perpetuated now for some 150 years. Bob and Helen Kleberg of King Ranch is a requisite addition to the library of any ranching, history, or Texana aficionado.
Texas beginnings at the time of the great trail drives and the emergence of the Texas livestock industry
âBuy land and never sell. . .â
CAPTAIN KING
Richard King, my great-grandfather, son of Irish immigrants, was born on July 10, 1824, in Orange County, New York. As a young orphan, he was apprenticed to a jeweler in New York City. His duties consisted mostly of sweeping and babysitting, which he despised. Not finding babysitting to his liking, he stowed away on the Desdemona, bound for Alabama. Soon discovered, he became cabin boy for the kindly captain, who later sent young Richard to his family in New England to be educated. After one winter there, King returned to river life in the South, where he became a skillful riverboat pilot.
The big house at Santa Gertrudis, which burned on January 4, 1912, and was replaced
Around 1845, his friend Mifflin Kenedy, a Quaker from Downington, Pennsylvania, asked King to join him in piloting riverboats on the Rio Grande for the U.S. Army. As the Mexican War loomed, Fort Brown and Brownsville were being built across from Matamoros, Mexico. King and Kenedy became friends with Charles Stillman, who had a riverboat and pack train, as well as with the Yturria family and a young Army officer named Robert E. Lee. Lee advised King to âbuy land and never sell.â
In 1847, after the war, King and Kenedy became partners, hauling freight on the river with Army surplus boats and other vessels they ordered in Pennsylvania, where excellent yellow pine was available for construction. River trade was active as adventurers provisioned for travel to the California gold fields. In addition to his river business, King did some bartending and innkeeping.
One day King, angry and weary, shouted a stream of profanity when he discovered a houseboat occupying his regular mooring. A slender young woman dressed him down in no uncertain terms for his language in the presence of a lady. Henrietta Chamberlain was standing on the deck of the houseboat belonging to her father, the Rev. Hiram Chamberlain. King apologized and came to the Reverendâs sermons so he could meet this feisty young lady.
About 1852, King, who was now captain of his ship, rode horseback with friends over the open prairies from Brownsville to Corpus Christi to see the new port and the Lone Star State Fair. The fair failed to impress him, but the tall grass, deer, antelope, and particularly the land captured his imagination. Around 1853, King purchased substantial acreage within a Spanish land grant, the RincĂłn de Santa Gertrudis, situated forty-five miles southwest of Corpus Christi in the forks formed by the Santa Gertrudis and San Fernando Creeks. On December 10, 1854, he married Henrietta in a ceremony performed by her father in Brownsville. They honeymooned camping out on their new ranch, where the Captain taught Henrietta to shoot the pistol and rifle he had given her. She kept her weapons and her Bible close by for the rest of her life.
HIRAM AND HENRIETTA
Henriettaâs father was born on April 1, 1797, on a farm near Monkton, Vermont. Hiram, the first of twelve children born to Swift and Mary Chamberlain, was greatly influenced by his aunt Abigail, who taught him to read the Bible every day. He graduated from Andover Theological Seminary in Cambridge, Massachusetts, full of missionary zeal, and in 1825 he married Maria Morse, a schoolteacher he had known for five years. (She was a relative of Samuel Morse, inventor of the telegraph and Morse code.) Later he and Maria moved to Booneville, Missouri, where my great-grandmother Henrietta was born in 1835. Three years later, the Chamberlains moved to New Franklin, Missouri, where Maria died in childbirth. The following year, Hiram married again, but in May 1840 his second wife died. He married Anna Griswold two years later, and they eventually had eight children.
Henrietta, close to her family, was sent, at about age fourteen, to finishing school at a ministerâs home in Holly Springs, Mississippi, east of Memphis. She was very homesick. Her father replied to her letters, telling her to be of good cheer and mindful of the needs of others, to read her Bible, and to work and study hard. He believed that faith, hope, and charity would sustain us all and that happiness was to be found in heaven. Henrietta was glad to rejoin her family on the houseboat in Brownsville, where in 1850, Hiram, the first Protestant minister on the Rio Grande, established the First Presbyterian Church.
FIRST PERMANENT SETTLER
In 1890 Grandfather Kleberg wrote, âCaptain King was the first permanent settler between the Nueces River and the Rio Grande. The Indians were thick in that region in those days, and it took a man of nerve to hold his own.â1
The depression in Brownsville and Matamoros in the aftermath of war and the gold rush led to banditry on both sides of the river, and yellow fever, malaria, and cholera were rampant. Hoping for a healthier life, Richard and Henrietta made the move to Santa Gertrudis in 1854. A jacal, a brush and mud structure, was their first home. One day when Henrietta was taking bread from her outdoor oven, she heard a sound from her daughter, Nettie. When she turned to rock the cradle, she saw a half-naked Indian holding a club over her baby, pointing with his other hand to his mouth. Stifling her impulse to scream, she smiled and handed him a loaf of bread. He disappeared as quickly as he had come. Henrietta Chamberlainâs faith had sustained her.
STOCKING THE VAST PRAIRIE
When the Civil War began, King, Kenedy, Charles Stillman, and Francisco Yturria sided with their friend, Gen. Robert E. Lee. Besides the friendship they shared, all believed in statesâ rights, the same issue that drove Texas to secede from Mexico (Santa Anna was determined to run Mexico from Mexico City with no rights for the states). Santa Gertrudis became an important stopover for Confederate goods going to and from Brownsville. At the ranch, fresh horses and oxen were available, in addition to good water, meat, salt, and people who could make repairs. At the river, Kenedy saw to it that goods such as cotton were consigned to trusted Mexican citizens, primarily Stillman and Yturria. Unless the North wanted war with Mexico, once goods were consigned to Mexican citizens they could be shipped up- or downriver with impunity.
As the war intensified, bandits from Mexico, as well as Indians and renegades, raided the sparsely populated ranches. King left home in mid-December without telling anyone where he was going. If the Yankees came looking for him, no one would have to lie. He was trying to recover his herd of cattle from Mexican thieves while dodging Yankees, but the herd had crossed the river. King went into the thievesâ camp, but, as they were in Mexico, he could not recover the cattle. Back at Santa Gertrudis, he found the place ransacked, with his wife and children gone. He learned that the Yankees had come shooting all the way to his house. When Francisco Alvarado, who was staying with the pregnant Mrs. King, ran to the door shouting, âDonât shoot! There are only women and children here,â the troops fired, killing him right beside Henrietta.2 She and her children departed for San Antonio to stay until the war was over. They stopped at San Patricio while Henrietta gave birth to her second son, Lee, named after the good friend who had recommended the site for the ranch home at Santa Gertrudis.
8 Mrs. Richard King with great-grandchildren, circa 1910
After the war, King continued to buy good ranch land, especially if it was near Santa Gertrudis or toward Brownsville. He stocked it with the best Longhorns he could find. He also improved his horses, buying a Kentucky stallion for more than he paid for his original ranch. He had wells and cisterns dug, put in earthen dams, built barbed-wire fences, and invested in the railroad from Corpus Christi to Laredo. Good lawyers in Brownsville and Corpus Christi worked on clearing titles to his lands. He recorded all he bought or sold in ledgers.
To stock the vast prairies of Santa Gertrudis, in a region then known as the Wild Horse Desert or Desert of the Dead (Desierto de los Muertos), King traveled to drought-stricken Cruillas, Mexico, where a rancher wished to sell his entire herd. A deal was struck. Then, seeing the sadness in the faces of the ranch folk, King asked the hacendado if he could invite them to journey with him to his ranch, where he had plenty of work. Many accepted and became Kineños, or Kingâs men, a title they still value.
The Kineños built homes for themselves and a nice pine and cypress one-story house with a front porch for the Kings. The house soon became two s...
Table des matiĂšres
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Foreword
Introduction
Family Tree
Kings and Klebergs
Campbells
Bob Met Helen
Genetics
My Motherâs Muse
Always Welcoming
Children
On the Range
Helenita
Resources in a Harsh Land
Thoroughbreds
Hazards
Ranching Pleasures
A Wider Frontier
Family
Endnotes
Normes de citation pour Bob and Helen Kleberg of King Ranch
APA 6 Citation
Groves, H. K. (2017). Bob and Helen Kleberg of King Ranch ([edition unavailable]). Trinity University Press. Retrieved from https://www.perlego.com/book/1527287/bob-and-helen-kleberg-of-king-ranch-pdf (Original work published 2017)
Chicago Citation
Groves, Helen Kleberg. (2017) 2017. Bob and Helen Kleberg of King Ranch. [Edition unavailable]. Trinity University Press. https://www.perlego.com/book/1527287/bob-and-helen-kleberg-of-king-ranch-pdf.
Harvard Citation
Groves, H. K. (2017) Bob and Helen Kleberg of King Ranch. [edition unavailable]. Trinity University Press. Available at: https://www.perlego.com/book/1527287/bob-and-helen-kleberg-of-king-ranch-pdf (Accessed: 14 October 2022).
MLA 7 Citation
Groves, Helen Kleberg. Bob and Helen Kleberg of King Ranch. [edition unavailable]. Trinity University Press, 2017. Web. 14 Oct. 2022.