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Monday, 15 August 2011 01:54

My Texas Family Legacy, The Burkett Pecan

Written by  Randy Chambers
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Texas State Historical Marker for the Burkett Pecan Texas State Historical Marker for the Burkett Pecan Image by Randy Chambers

My mothers maiden name was Burkett, her Great Uncle and my Great-Great Uncle if I have it right, is responsible for bringing the Burkett pecan to being in Texas.

While my mothers family lived in the Comanche Texas area,  her fore relatives must have lived in the area of Putnam Texas.

While driving home from a friends wedding in San Angelo, I made the route to take me by the site of the original tree 44ish mile East of Abilene at FM 880 and I-20 in Putnam and take the picture seen here.

My mom and dad had taken me to see the Texas State Historical marker when I was about 10, I assume soon after it was erected in 1966.
The tree was struck by lighting in 1993 and despite efforts by the State to keep it alive was felled in 1994.

I am very proud to own a writing pen that was turned from that tree.

From http://famoustreesoftexas.tamu.edu/TreeHistory.aspx?TreeName=Original%20Burkett%20Pecan

Historical period20th Century (1900 & Later)
Historical topicsPecan-Our State Tree
SpeciesPecan (Carya illionoiensis)
CountyCallahan
Public access?No Longer Applicable; tree is dead
Tree TourComing Soon

In the fall of 1900, two young sons of J.H. Burkett were squirrel hunting in the bottomlands along Battle Fish Creek, in Callahan County. Neither realized that a handful of pecans they gathered from a squirrel's nest that day would later be a factor in placing their name in the history of pecan culture.

Their father saw the nuts and, recognizing their excellence, urged the boys to find the parent tree. After some searching along the south bluff of the river, they found the tree. It was on land owned by W. A. Orr of Putnam. It was protected on three sides by live oak and mesquite trees, and between it and the river was a tall elm, which protected the pecan from the eroding river waters.

Each spring Burkett undertook to graft buds from the tree, but he had no success until 1903. Someone destroyed the parent tree in 1910. But today, thanks to Burkett's work, the variety is firmly established. One of the first papershell pecans, it grows best in the upland sandy soil of the Texas Cross Timbers region and requires less moisture than varieties such as the Stuart, which are found closer to the Gulf Coast.
ORIGINAL BURKETT PECAN. In the fall of 1900 two young sons of J. H. Burkett, Omar and Joe, found nuts from the parent of the original Burkett pecan tree. When the boys told their father they found the pecans in a squirrel nest, he urged them to return and find the tree that bore them. After some searching they found the parent tree growing on the south bank of Battle Fish Creek, Callahan County, and obtained some bud-wood, which their father grafted to a second-growth seedling. Although only two buds grew, they produced the first two nuts in 1905. In 1908 one bud was destroyed, and by 1910 the parent tree had been destroyed also. The other grafted bud grew into the tree now known as the original Burkett pecan. In the 1920s and 1930s the Burkett papershell pecan was the most popular variety of pecan because of its thin shell, unusual flavor, and large size. The Burkett pecan was officially named for its breeder by the Texas Nut Growers Association at a meeting in Waco. In 1966 the Texas Historical Commission placed a marker at the site of the tree. The original Burkett pecan is located on the north side of Interstate 20 one-half mile east of Farm Road 880, near the Eastland-Callahan county line.
Last modified on Monday, 15 August 2011 15:13

3 comments

  • Comment Link Stephan Dueboay Thursday, 01 March 2012 18:01 posted by Stephan Dueboay

    By the way after almost a year Randy...I too, have one of those ink pens.

    Cousin Steve

  • Comment Link Randy Chambers Monday, 15 August 2011 18:36 posted by Randy Chambers

    No Prob Cuz, post when you want, I know yours will be way better anyway!
    No one really reads mine, I do it for me.

    So am I right that J.J. Burkett is our Great Great Uncle?

  • Comment Link Steve Dueboay Monday, 15 August 2011 17:54 posted by Steve Dueboay

    Good post cuz! I can't believe you and I wrote the same article within the confines of the same week or so. I was waiting to scan a picture of me in front of the tree in 1991, so I could add it to my blog.

    I'll wait a couple of days to post mine, so the glory of yours won't be lessened any...

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