Ages 5 to 7 years. From her days as a sheltered daughter of a Presbyterian minister to becoming La Patrona of the legendary King Ranch, this account for beginning readers examines the life of one of Texas' foremost frontier women and illustrates the realities of life on a pioneer ranch. Henrietta Chamberlain King met her husband Richard, a rugged riverboat captain who delivered freight to the mouth of the Rio Grande, while a young woman in Brownsville, Texas. Together they settled in the brush country of the south Texas gulf coast, determined to build a ranching empire. With her husband gone most of the time, Henrietta became as familiar with a gun as she was with her children and often found herself dealing with marauding Indians, Mexican soldiers, and the everyday dangers of the harsh Texas frontier. Her belief in education, her frugality, and her keen business sense helped her not only take the reins of the ranch, but lead it into the future by making great contributions to the cattle industry.
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Mary Dodson Wade is a retired educator and librarian and the author of more than fifty books, including Christopher Columbus, Cinco De Mayo, I'm Going to Texas, Lou Gehrig's Disease, and Tsunami: Monster Waves. Pat Finney has illustrated several children's books, including The Courage Seed and Two for Texas: The Extraordinary Story of Kian and Jane Long.
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