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More Than Running Cattle: The Mallet Ranch of the South Plainsby M. Scott Sosebee
Michael M. Miller
More Than Running Cattle: The Mallet Ranch of the South Plains. By M. Scott Sosebee, with a foreword by Jim Bret Campbell and photographs by Wyman Meinzer. (Lubbock: Texas Tech University Press, 2023. Pp. 245. Illustrations, map, notes, index.)
This glossy, photograph-laden profile tells the story of the Mallet Ranch on Texas’s South Plains. Primarily focused on the lives of founder David DeVitt’s philanthropic daughters, Christine and Helen, the narrative highlights the uniqueness of an operation founded in the late-nineteenth century that successfully continues to operate today largely as it began. In More Than Running Cattle, historian M. Scott Sosebee continues to feature lesser-known contributors to Texas history. He pens here a synthesis and update of David Murrah’s 1994 monograph, Oil, Taxes, and Cats, wrapping it into a package underscoring the contributions the Mallet Land and Cattle Company continues to provide to the region. 1
A casual glance at this oversized book on a shelf or in a catalog does not reveal the complex, sometimes distressing story told among the historical prints, institution-provided marketing shots, and mostly uncaptioned photographs provided by Wyman Meinzer. His grassland vistas of the ranch’s acres dotted with Angus cattle, oil field pumpjacks, and decaying buildings seem detached from Sosebee’s narrative. Only the few historical photographs and family [End Page 476]snapshots fit closely within the chronicle. Others feature the projects the DeVitt sisters’ largesse brought to Lubbock and other parts of the South Plains through their CH Foundation and The Helen Jones Foundation, Inc.
Despite the book’s ”coffee table” feel, Sosebee’s account proves captivating and “has everything television or movie producers and directors might want” (p. 221). The story often takes on a gossipy, soap-opera feel in describing and dissecting the often-dysfunctional family and company dynamics that unfolded over a century. There is the long-distance relationship that David and Florence DeVitt carried on throughout most of their marriage, the tragic deaths of the couple’s two sons, Christine’s indecision and obstinance, and there is Helen’s colon. Readers may find much to dislike about the DeVitt family, but they will see much to admire, too, not the least of which are the gifts for which they are responsible. While acknowledging Christine’s sometimes abrasive personality, at her death many remembered her quiet help and generosity to Mallet hands and to nurses and others who looked after her in later years. At this book’s core is a celebration of “one of the most notable philanthropic funds in Texas history” (p. 107).
Christine chartered the CH Foundation in 1969. Her generosity might have been partially motivated by her hatred for paying taxes. By 1950, primarily from oil revenue, DeVitt wealth had grown to heights the sisters never imagined. By 1969, Christine had already donated millions to Lubbock’s Methodist Hospital and to Texas Tech University. Too numerous to mention here are the many other beneficiaries of the DeVitt fortune. Since 1984, the sisters’ foundations have given more than $360 million to colleges and universities, public and private schools, museums, libraries, and human and health services groups – mostly in Texas. While Sosebee’s narrative is ostensibly a ranch history, the true power of this book is in publicizing the legacy left by the DeVitt sisters through the continuing impact of their philanthropic efforts.
Michael M. Miller The Colony, TX
Footnotes
1. David J. Murrah, Oil, Taxes, and Cats: A History of the DeVitt Family and the Mallet Ranch(Lubbock: Texas Tech University Press, 1994).
期刊介绍:
The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, continuously published since 1897, is the premier source of scholarly information about the history of Texas and the Southwest. The first 100 volumes of the Quarterly, more than 57,000 pages, are now available Online with searchable Tables of Contents.