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It was an annual event organized by the National Wool Growers Association (U.S.), American Sheep Producers Council, and the Wool Bureau, Inc. at San Angelo, Texas, from 1952 to 1972. Originally a Texas-only event (the Miss Wool of Texas Pageant), it attracted wider entrants from 1958 and evolved into a national pageant.
It is located on the shores of O.C. Fisher Lake outside San Angelo, Texas. The research center serves as a full-sized working ranch, one of few among U.S. universities. It includes 150 Rambouillet sheep (the university mascot), 100 Suffolk and hair sheep, 95 Boer goats, 50 Angora goats, and over 100 Angus cattle. [2]
In response, San Angelo City Council and City Manager Daniel Valenzuela approved the sheep statue.
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Robert Briley started the first local auction that changed hands many times to become the Mills County Livestock Commission of Goldthwaite. [2] Later to be called the Mills County Commission Company, at one time it was the largest sheep and goat sale in the world. [1]
Daniel was re-elected governor in 1958 by a 7–1 margin over the Republican Edwin S. Mayer (1896–1963), a San Angelo sheep and goats owner who was twice a delegate for Dwight D. Eisenhower at the 1952 and 1956 Republican National Conventions.
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San Angelo (/ s æ n ˈ æ n dʒ ə l oʊ / SAN AN-jə-loh [5]) is a city in and the county seat of Tom Green County, Texas, United States. [6] Its location is in the Concho Valley, a region of West Texas between the Permian Basin to the northwest, Chihuahuan Desert to the southwest, Osage Plains to the northeast, and Central Texas to the southeast.