A cattle rancher from birth
Retired Marine Corps officer Georgia Lee Swickheimer runs her family's ranch in South Texas.
By LOURDES VAZQUEZ
Victoria Advocate
GOLIAD, Texas — Brownie, a legendary bovine mounted to a wall in the Market House Museum in Goliad, was once the lead steer at the Swickheimer cattle ranch in Fannin.
"The cattle would follow him," said Georgia Lee Swickheimer, whose grandparents, G.J. and Loula Margaret, founded the ranch in 1892.
Swickheimer's father, George Glover Swickheimer, and two uncles inherited the cow-calf operation. At age 4, Georgia Lee Swickheimer began helping on the ranch. Her father gave her age-suitable jobs. It's understandable that ranching became her life, too.
"I just tagged along with my father," she said. "You just kind of help where you can. It sort of gets in your blood. It grows on you."
As she grew older, she rode horseback and helped to corral cattle with the help of Brownie, the lead steer.
When the young rancher went to ºÚÁÏÀÏ˾»ú to major in social science, she stopped riding. During college breaks she reconnected with the ranch and helped again however she could.
After college, Swickheimer joined the U.S. Marine Corps and remained active until 1980, the year she retired from the military. After her parents and uncle died, the ranch was split between her and a cousin.
Now 72 years old, Swickheimer keeps busy on her family's ranch.
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