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William Warren Sterling - Texas RangerSTERLING, WILLIAM WARREN (1891-1960). William Warren Sterling, lawman, son of Edward A. and Mary (Chamberlain) Sterling, was born near Belton, Texas, on April 27, 1891, and spent his early years on his family's ranch before they moved to Beaumont in 1901.

He entered Texas A&M at seventeen and two years later was working on ranches near Falfurrias and in Hidalgo County. During 1915-16, when political unrest in Mexico spilled over the Rio Grande border, he was a posseman and scout for the Third United States Cavalry in Hidalgo and Cameron counties. During World War I he was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Ninth Texas Infantry. Afterward he was in Mirando City as deputy sheriff and justice of the peace during the oil boom in Webb County.

In 1927 Governor Dan Moody appointed him captain, Company D, Texas Rangers, and he was sent immediately to the boomtown of Borger. In 1928 his ranger headquarters was moved to Falfurrias. About this time the sculptor Gutzon Borglum used Sterling as the model for his planned Texas Ranger statue.

In 1929 Sterling was in Pettus when an oil boom started there, and he helped stop the lawlessness. During the administration of Governor Ross S. Sterling he served as adjutant general (commander of the Texas Rangers and the Texas National Guard); in this capacity he closed the Red River bridge at Denison during the much publicized Red River bridge controversy between Oklahoma and Texas in 1931.

When Governor Miriam "Ma" Ferguson took office in 1933, Adjutant General W. W. Sterling resigned his office. Forty Rangers, including Captain Hamer, left with him. As a colonel during World War II he helped set up selective service for the Eighth Service Command. Sterling managed the Driscoll ranches in South Texas and later appraised ranches. His book, Trails and Trials of a Texas Ranger, was published in 1959. He was married to Zora Lou Eckhardt, and they had two daughters. Sterling died on April 26, 1960, and was buried in Seaside Memorial Park, Corpus Christi.

William Warren Sterling book - Trails and Trials of a Texas Ranger

William Warren Sterling appears to be the great-great grandson of Levi Sterling of Bucks County, PA a Soldier of the Revolutionary War

1 Levi Sterling b: 1759
    2 Seneca E. Sterling b: 1793 d: 1868
      + Mary Blaker b: 1798
        3 Jesse Sterling b: 1824 d: 1907
          + Isabel Allen
            4 Edward A. Sterling b: 1855 d: 1933
              + Mary Loudentia Chamberlain b: 1868
                5 William Warren Sterling b:Apr 27 1891 d: Apr 26 1960

 
 
GENERAL W.W. STERLING
(APRIL 27, 1891-APRIL 26, 1960)

OFFICER WHO ROSE FROM RANGER TO ADJUTANT GENERAL. RANCHING, LAW ENFORCEMENT WERE HIS LIFES WORK. SIX FEET, FOUR INCHES TALL, HE WAS AN EXPERT SHOT AND HORSEMAN.

SCOUT FOR U. S. ARMY IN 1914-1917 BORDER TROUBLES; SERVED IN TWO WORLD WARS; A COLONEL IN WORLD WAR II. ADJUTANT GENERAL OF TEXAS, 1931-1933, HE ENFORCED THE LAW, ACHIEVED ORDER, INVOKED EQUAL JUSTICE FOR ALL.

HE MARRIED ZORA ECKHARDT; HAD TWO DAUGHTERS, INEZ AND SARA ROSS.

TEXAS HISTORIC GRAVE MARKER - 1969

 

Seaside Memorial Park (grave), Rober Drive and Ocean Drive, Corpus Christi, Texas - Placed 1969


BIBLIOGRAPHY: Austin American, April 27, 1960, August 28, 1969. Brooks County Texan, March 22, 1929. Cattleman, May 1960. Corpus Christi Caller and Daily Herald, February 15, 16, 27, 28, 1915. Oran Warder Nolen, "Col. W. W. Sterling: Cowman, Texas Ranger and a Prince among Men," Cattleman, June 1966. Vertical Files, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin.