Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, has more than 9,300 acres of stepped land.
Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, has more than 9,300 acres of stepped land.
Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, has more than 9,300 acres of stepped land.
Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, has more than 9,300 acres of stepped land.
Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, has more than 9,300 acres of stepped land.
Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, has more than 9,300 acres of stepped land.
Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, has more than 9,300 acres of stepped land.
Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, has more than 9,300 acres of stepped land.
Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, has more than 9,300 acres of stepped land.
Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, has more than 9,300 acres of stepped land.
Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, has more than 9,300 acres of stepped land.
Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, has more than 9,300 acres of stepped land.
Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, has more than 9,300 acres of stepped land.
Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, has more than 9,300 acres of stepped land.
In 1856, a new status quo of the army known as Camp Cooper was opened in North Texas.
The men stationed there in Texas in the nineteenth century had two tasks, as reported through the Texas State Historical Association: to colonists and to monitor the nearest Comanche indigenous population.
They have become the headquarters of 4 corporations of the Second United States Cavalry under the command of prominent Lieutenant Colonel Robert E. Lee, before becoming a general in the Confederate States Army.
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It is said that Lee even turned one of the rattlesnakes living on earth into his non-public puppy at the camp.
Now the assets on which the same camp is located are on the market, with Hall’s partners
Potential may submit its sealed bids for Tecumseh Ranch in Throckmorton County, northwest of Fort Worth, on July 22, hoping to reclaim more than 9,388 acres of land.
The Fort Worth Star-Telegram described the many amenities of the historic property, the Brazos River shoreline, the limestone benches and the mesquite apartments.
According to the Telegram, as a working ranch, the land will come with two sets of enclosures for running and sending cattle, a major barn, a space for the administrator and a reproduction of the “Tecumseh House” where John Alexander and Sallie Reynolds Matthews, the original owners – built in the past 1800s.
From the point of view of production, Jacob’s list indicates that the land can cope with a breeding farm of 300-350 animals.
The genuine real estate company also says the assets are a hunters’ paradise, with thriving populations of white-tailed deer, turkeys, wild boars, quail, birds of prey and vermin.
The existing owners opted to execute the sale through a sealed bidding procedure (all donations were personal) because of “significant market interest,” according to Jacobs.
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