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  2. King Ranch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Ranch

    King and Lewis established a cow camp on Santa Gertrudis Creek. During this time, Richard King purchased the Rincón de Santa Gertrudis grant, a 15,500 acres (63 km 2; 24.2 sq mi) holding that encompassed present-day Kingsville, Texas. It was purchased from the heirs of Juan Mendiola of Camargo on July 25, 1853, for $300.

  3. Santa Gertrudis cattle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Gertrudis_cattle

    The Santa Gertrudis was developed on the King Ranch in southern Texas. The name derives from the Spanish-owned estate of Los Cerros de Santa Gertrudis, where in 1851 the King Ranch was established. [3]: 290 The ranch was initially stocked with Texas Longhorn cattle.

  4. Leesville, Texas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leesville,_Texas

    The Midtown-Downtown Texas State Highway 80/Farm to Market Road 1682 intersection was rated at 2,978 vehicles. [54] At present, the primary industries of the Leesville area are the real estate holdings of Texas Wildlife Management and the Quien Sabe Ranch that raises Santa Gertrudis cattle of King Ranch Running W Bull descent.

  5. Mifflin Kenedy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mifflin_Kenedy

    Mifflin Kenedy (1818–1895) was a rancher, steamboat operator, and investor who settled in Texas. He began his steamboating career on the Ohio , Mississippi , and Missouri Rivers . He then went to Texas and northern Mexico, where he helped get many steamboats to the Rio Grande area during the First Cortina War (1859–1860).

  6. Tweet Kimball - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tweet_Kimball

    Kimball in 1938. Mildred Montague Genevieve "Tweet" Kimball (14 June 1914–16 January 1999), [1] [2] was an American rancher, art collector, and heiress who owned and lived on the 3,400-acre (1,376 ha) Cherokee Ranch and its associated castle north of Sedalia in Douglas County, Colorado, from 1954 until her death.

  7. Richard King (entrepreneur) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_King_(entrepreneur)

    5 including Alice Gertrudis King Kleberg, the namesake of Alice, Texas Signature Richard King (July 10, 1824 – April 14, 1885) was a riverboat captain, Confederate , entrepreneur, and most notably, the founder of the King Ranch in South Texas , which at the time of his death in 1885 encompassed over 825,000 acres (3,340 km 2 ).

  8. Kingsville, Texas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingsville,_Texas

    Kingsville, 1908 Kingsville, c. 1910s Kingsville, 2011. The history of Kingsville is closely intertwined with the city's main creek, the Santa Gertrudis. The first recorded inhabitants of the area were the Coahuiltecan Malaquites, surviving on seafood from nearby Baffin Bay, with settlements along the Santa Getrudis and San Fernando creeks, and the Cayo del Grullo branch of Baffin Bay. [7]

  9. Helen Kleberg Groves - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_Kleberg_Groves

    Helen Kleberg Groves (October 20, 1927 – May 6, 2022) was a horsewoman and cattle rancher dubbed the "First Lady of Cutting" by the San Antonio Express-News and inducted in 1988 into the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame. [1]