Cenizo Journal Winter 2013 | Page 9

got extended,” he said with an infectious grin, his blue eyes sparkling. Webb’s decades of work as an educator and his initial years as a mechanic at his brothers’ service station acquainted him with ranchers across West Texas. He became par- ticular friends with the Mitchell family. “I was blessed to drive Tom Mitchell and his wife Mamie on several trips to Waco to the Methodist Children’s Home there – the Tom Mitchell home for 30 boys and the Mamie Mitchell Home for 30 girls. That was extremely fortunate for me because my wife Laurel and I had to adopt children, and I asked him to put in a good word for us. They called me a year later and said they had a baby girl, eight days old.” Webb’s association with the Methodist Children’s Home has continued as well: he’s a member of their governing board and now helps to oversee programs for about 1,400 children from Texas and New Mexico. That baby girl became his daughter Diane, who lives now in Dripping Springs. He and Laurel adopted three other chil- dren: another daughter Krista lives in Round Rock, where the family gathered for Thanksgiving 2012. His son James lives in Marfa; another son died young. His wife died in 2009. Many local friends joined the family to celebrate Brit’s 84th birthday on July 24 of 2012. Among the ranching families from Marfa’s earlier days, he remembers the Fowlkes brothers, Preston, Manny and Edwin, who had holdings south of Marfa, and the Smith brothers, Kenneth and Teryl, who had ranches to the north of town. Hart and Amy Greenwood “were great friends and customers,” he said. Their ranch is now part of Cibolo Creek holdings. He recalls the late Courtney Mellard, who ranched south of Marfa, as a major cattle-buyer in West Texas who “shipped trainloads of Highland Herefords to Iowa.” And during his years in Valentine, he dealt frequently with the Brite family, who still own “probably one of the largest generational ranches in the country,” he said. But as the years went by, absentee ownership changed the ranching culture. “We don’t know these people because they live out-of-state. Ranching has changed to where they use 4-wheelers. Back then ranch families didn’t earn much, and now it costs lots more to have a family living on a ranch...in earlier years, they had someone to cook and clean, even teachers for the kids. Or they had to move into town for the school year. Even now ranches are just too far- flung to run school buses. Today there are some ranch kids that are home- schooled, which gets them out of a lot of driving. But they still come to town for 4- H. The ranching business has changed a whole lot.” West Texas cattle have changed too, Webb noted. “The Highland Hereford was famous all over, but now the ranchers have a lot of Angus – they found that cer- tain breeds cross-bred better than straight Hereford. The Brite ranch is still prominent in selling Hereford bulls, but not many have pure Herefords anymore.” Webb laments that fact: “I don’t think there’s anything prettier than a white- faced calf. Wayne Baize up at Fort Davis is such a good artist,” he said, adding that “He paints Herefords.” Occasionally Brit sees the children of ranch families he’s known through the years. “Today most of those kids are retiring or have already retired, and I’m still running a tire shop...” His face crin- kling into a grin, then a grimace, he added: “The tires and wheels seem to be heavier than they were a few years ago.” Fort Davis, Texas History, Science, Nature, www.fortdavis.com 800-524-3015 1887 & Now Fun! !"#$%&'(()*+(,-% .,-%,/ Free Admission; Donations Welcome Open Wednesday through Saturday, 10 am- 3 pm 112 East Murphy Street in Odessa, Texas 432.333.4072 www.whitepoolhouse.org Funded in part by the Texas Historical Commission and OCA&H . Radio f or a Wide Range Serving F ar W es t T e x as a t 9 3.5 FM Bec ome a member a t www . marf apublicr adio . or g or 1-800-90 3-KR T S D AVIS M OUNTAINS N UT C OMPANY Roasted and Dipped Pecans You can taste the difference care makes! Please stop in for FREE SAMPLES Hwy 17 in Fort Davis • Open: Mon. - Sat. 9 to 5 Great handmade gourmet gifts! Visit us on the web: www.allpecans.com 800-895-2101 • 432-426-2101 [email protected] !"#$%&'()*&+,$-"./)" 2(#"&$())5&+ !"("'*+(().)+(,-"*"&%).)0(,)&% ! 89&" 66788),$ 687?8),$)*&)6)'$ ?89$&89$="2$! 89&") 66788),$ 6B76?)'$ J788)'$ D(98()9&" ?76?)'$) E4-9&" ?7E8)'$) !(0(."(9$E-4)"$E4-9&")$ J788)'$) 9&(%"% );(,-(()&()=+"!,(")* @+()((-)A, ())8)*&)BC) D&-#-);#,-)A, ())EFGC) H-+#*)I#,)) +((%))A, ())6EF6KC I&%*($'#,*",();(,-(() ;(,-(())M&()=,(%"% ),%-)*!() N(,#"% )&M)*!()2&(#- I!,$O(()9+)"")I&%"((* !"#$%&'()$$+,-)./,&0$12 4.2$#$6!(#$6$&89$:#$;"2$!"#<$60,-8($=>?#@>A#A>B> Cenizo First Quarter 2013 9