Beau Best
A long line
of Striblings was begun in Texas at the beginning of the Civil War. Born in Tennessee, James Clayton Stribling
was working as a 32 year old school teacher when he was located at La Grange, Texas by the
1860 U. S. Census. He soon married Lurana Fidelia Hudson Cunningham in
1861 in Fayette County, Texas. A
grandson of a Revolutionary War soldier by the same name, James Clayton
Stribling passed his name on to his son James Clayton Stribling Jr. when
he was born in Winchester, Fayette County, Texas, in the fall of 1864. Bastrop
County records reveal that “Major” Stribling and his family were still residing
at “Cunningham’s Prairie” in Fayette County in 1875.
Sometime
around 1880 J. C. Jr. began studies at Baylor College at Independence, while Major
Stribling’s brother John Beckham Stribling came to Texas with his in
laws, the Fowlers not far behind. Soon J. C. Sr. and his younger brother
John and the Fowlers had quite a spread near Llano, Texas. Stribling was the name, and CATTLE was the game...
Just click on the picture to view an enlargement.
Firmly
planted in Llano, J. C. Stribling Jr. grew up in the cattle business with an ambition
to start a purebred Hereford herd. He became one of the pioneers of the modern
cattle industry when in 1897 he started just that, with just ten purebred
heifers. J. C. was married to Kathrine Tommie Long and they had five children,
four which lived to maturity; Ruth, Webster Hudson (died age 18), John
Benjamin and James Clayton III, born in 1902, known to present day
descendants as “Pop.”
Only
daughter Ruth attended Mary Hardin- Baylor all-female college in Belton before
marrying into the Fowler family next door. There is no doubt J. C. was proud of
his daughter Ruth, as he made a gift of $50,000.00 to her alma mater in 1920 to
build a new dormitory, named after her. [My own daughter lived there while
attending Mary Hardin-Baylor. I remember
thinking… I wonder… Could it be the same
as my friends in Navasota? NAW!]
But the
offspring J.C. was most famous for were the calves thrown by his record-priced prize
bull, Beau Best. Many of the
great Hereford bulls in the early days were from the “Beau” strain. I was actually
hired to restore this painting! It was about this time that the depth of the Stribling
family heritage unfolded to me. Beau Best helped build a Stribling Hereford legacy
that lasted until the herd was dispersed in 1932.
During
hard times the Stribling men fought the beef price wars with particular
cunning, modifying their trade to raise free ranging hogs instead. In the
spring they would round up their nearly wild swine and put them on rail cars to
the meat packers, making huge profits, and a few heart attacks no doubt when
these feral Hill Country monsters were sent into the unsuspecting processing plants.
The Striblings
had cattle operations all over, and were even recorded as running cattle on a
lease from the Osage Nation in northern Oklahoma around the Turn of the Century.
After several severe droughts in Texas the Striblings relocated their operation
in the 1950’s to the Madill Ranch, nestled in the Arbuckle Mountains of Oklahoma.
J. C. Jr passed away in 1954.
J.C. III
stayed in the cattle industry all of his life, raising and marketing cattle in
Central Texas and Oklahoma. His son Jim (J. C IV) grew up in ranching and told me
plenty of stories of his adventures on the range. He once described how he was
caught out in the open in a serious Oklahoma hail storm. Just a young man, he
knew what to do, and he stripped off his saddle and slapped his horse hard, hoping
he would fly home and make it to shelter… and then covered himself with the
saddle as the baseball-sized ice balls began to pummel him. This way he and the horse fared alright… although it
was a long walk home afterwards. He ended up as a professor at Texas A & M,
teaching Land Management. His son Jimmy Stribling (V) does tractor - dozer work and lives in Fluvanna.
There have been six J. C. Striblings in ths particular line, and I have met three of them. The last in the line, J. C. Stribling (VI!) is the oldest son of my buddy Steve Stribling and attends Navasota High School.
There have been six J. C. Striblings in ths particular line, and I have met three of them. The last in the line, J. C. Stribling (VI!) is the oldest son of my buddy Steve Stribling and attends Navasota High School.
Today
vestiges of the Stribling legacy still operate cattle ranches including the
Stillwaters Ranch in Llano, Texas run by Stribling descendants, brothers Will and Clayton Leverett.
The photograph was taken in "No Man's Land" of the Indian Territory and shows the "Llano Trail Drivers", 1880s. The riders (left to right) were identified by Mr. C.E.Shultz as Bill Pettet, Jim Wilson, Scrap Reed, Marion Clymer, Zan Watts, Dave Reed, Dock Ligon and John Stribling. "Stribling was boss of the herd and, as a result of his then considered "cranky" notion that a man ought to butcher his own beef, the herd thus pictured was one of the very few if not the only one driven up the trail that provided all the steaks consumed by the accompanying riders...." It's the cover photo of the Stribling and Related Families book by Mary Frances Stribling Moursund.
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