Description: Los Jaboncillos Ranch continues to market high quality replacement cattle and Quarter Horses. Commercial females crossed to purebred bulls are sold "private treaty" seasonally on the ranch. The broodmare band produces foals from the highest performing sires in the industry such as DUAL REY, SMOOTH AS A CAT, METALLIC CATT, and WR THIS CATS SMART to name a few. Hunting of native species of wildlife is currently closely held but the ranch offers hunting of trophy class Black Buck through commercial hunting pac
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In 1820, the Mexican revolution ended Spanish control over the region and in 1824, the Mexican government make provision for additional land grants not covered previously. The name "Jaboncillos", given to the 5 league land grant, was derived from the eastern soapberry trees first observed by Spanish explorers along what was later named "Los Jaboncillos" creek. The Ramirez brothers, of the jurisdiction of Camargo, Mexico proved up land grant claims fought through courts in Spain and later in Mexico. In Decem
The Seeligson family had been acquiring land in the "Wild Horse Desert" of the Nueces Strip that they called "Galveston Ranch". Other large grants in the area had been acquired by ranching pioneers such as Captain Richard King, Mifflin Kennedy, Ed Lassater and Dillard Fant. At the time, this unfenced region was both buffer and battlefield, where trails were travelled by Civil War Cavalry Soldiers and later by Texas Rangers attempting to restore law and order.
The Jaboncillos Grant adjoining the Galveston Ranch to the north. In 1895, John and Florence "Seeligson" Houghton were able to acquire the prized land grant from the Ramirez heirs and operated the grant as a working ranch. Mrs. Houghton, the daughter of Sgt. Henry Seeligson and wife of John Houghton bequeathed the ranch to her nephew, Arthur W. Seeligson who later divided the ranch between his three children Arthur, Lamar, and Lucy. The original headquarters, held by Lucy "Seeligson" Roe became well known a