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Here's a look at the history of the West Texas 6666 Ranch, which sold for over $320 million

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Alana Edgin, Lubbock Avalanche-Journal
Thu, June 9, 2022, 4:11 PM
 
 
In this article:
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  • Taylor Sheridan
    American screenwriter and director
  • Samuel Burk Burnett
    American rancher
 
 
The 6666’s Ranches, comprising 266,255-plus acres in West Texas, has been sold to an American screenwriter.
 
The 6666’s Ranches, comprising 266,255-plus acres in West Texas, has been sold to an American screenwriter.

The ink is officially dry on the sale of the historic West Texas 6666 Ranch, which carried a price tag of over $320 million for 266,255-plus acres. Taylor Sheridan, fellow Texan and American screenwriter, now owns a property filled with the history starting in the 1800s, according to a news release.

The ranch, also known as the 4-6's, was founded in 1870 and covered multiple counties. It had three divisions - The 6666’s Ranch in Guthrie with 142,372 acres, Dixon Creek Ranch in Carson and Hutchison Counties with 114,455 acres, and Frisco Creek in Sherman County with 9,428 acres.

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Cowboys working the cattle at the 6666 Ranch.
 
Cowboys working the cattle at the 6666 Ranch.

Where is the 6666 Ranch located?

While the sprawling lands cover a large area, the headquarters was on the 4-6's near Guthrie. The "Big House," though a more recent addition, is one spot that stood out in the compound, totaling at 13,280 square feet of living area.

It contains 13 bedrooms, 13 baths, three powder rooms, two kitchens, dining room and three fireplaces, according to an article from 2020.

Headquarters also has:

  • Pilot’s quarters.

  • Two bunk houses.

  • The famous 6666’s loft barn.

  • Several horse sheds.

  • Shop building.

  • Equipment storage.

  • Feed building.

  • Round pen.

  • Dog kennel.

  • Two laborer houses.

  • Approximately 20 employee houses.

  • The 6666’s Supply House.

  • And a 3,600 square foot enclosed airplane hangar with a 65 foot x 6,000 foot asphalt lighted private landing strip.

The 6666 Ranch's history

Samuel Burk Burnett, who later went on to become an influential cattleman in Texas history, founded the ranch in 1870 at the age of 19. In 1900, he purchased the 8 Ranch in Guthrie, followed by the Dixon Creek Ranch. By 1917, Burnett set his eyes on crafting "the finest ranch house in West Texas."

That house still stands, and his legacy bears a mark on Texas. He met with Quanah Parker and Theodore Roosevelt, and in 1905 invited President Roosevelt to a wolf hunt. During that hunt, Burnett influenced an area's name change from Nesterville to Burkburnett.

1906 wolf hunt, Native American Territory. Participants included Quanah Parker, Burk Burnett and Theodore Roosevelt.
 
1906 wolf hunt, Native American Territory. Participants included Quanah Parker, Burk Burnett and Theodore Roosevelt.

In 1910, Burnett moved on to oil and banking, handing the ranch off to his eldest son. He died on June 27, 1922.

Anne Marion, who assumed management of the 6666’s Ranch in 1980, died on Feb. 11, 2020. She was the fourth-generation owner, and after her passing was memorialized with an life-size bronze statue.

 

Late Four Sixes Ranch owner Anne Marion honored at Ranching Heritage Center

 

Marion, a member of the Texas Tech University board of regents from 1981-1986, received the National Golden Spur Award from the National Ranching Heritage Center in 2001. Her will wished for the ranching operations to be sold.

'Yellowstone' TV show, more filmed at 6666 Ranch

The King of Western Swing James Robert Wills, who performed with his family at the ranch occasionally.

"Mackintosh and T.J.," a 1975 movie starring Roy Rogers, was filmed at the ranch. This was also Rogers' final film.

"Yellowstone," a television series directed by Sheridan, was filmed on the ranch.

This article originally appeared on Lubbock Avalanche-Journal: Historic West Texas 6666 Ranch sold; here's a historic look back

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3 hours ago, joe_zrt said:

Think of all the pollution generated and damage that place has done through the years.

A ranch that size is likely responsible for all the global warming this planet is seeing, included Lake Mead!!!! 

 

climin2.jpg

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