Hebbronville, Texas Hebbronville, Texas Water fortress in Hebbronville Location of Hebbronville, Texas Location of Hebbronville, Texas State Texas County Jim Hogg Hebbronville calls itself "The Vaquero Capitol of Texas and the USA." The abandoned Hotel Viggo (built 1915) is positioned athwart the highway from the Jim Hogg County Courthouse in Hebbronville.

In Hebbronville was featured in 2004 in an episode of Bob Phillips's Texas Country Reporter.

Hebbronville (/ h br nv l/ heb-r n-vil) is a census-designated place (CDP) in and the governmental center of county of Jim Hogg County, Texas, United States. The populace was 4,558 at the 2010 census.

In 1918, Helen Sewel Harbison became the first woman in Texas to cast a ballot, two years before the implementation of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

The Colegio Altamirano, established by pioneer of Spanish lineage who wanted their kids to learn Spanish culture, was an institution in Hebbronville from 1897 until its method in 1958.

Hebbronville is positioned at 27 18 41 N 98 40 52 W (27.311259, -98.680998). According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the CDP has a total region of 5.9 square miles (15 km2), all of it land.

Hebbronville has a borderline humid subtropical climate (Koppen climate classification Cfa)/hot semi-arid climate (Koppen BSh).

Summers are very hot and humid: 152 afternoons each year top 90 F or 32.2 C, with 27.6 afternoons reaching 100 F or 37.8 C and amid the summer of 2009 eleven afternoons topped 110 F or 43.3 C. During July and August combined, all but three mornings stay above 68 F or 20 C and seven mornings per year stay above 77 F or 25 C, with as many as forty mornings staying over this temperature amid 1998.

The hottest temperature on record has been 118 F (47.8 C) on July 9, 2009, and the hottest minimum 88 F (31.1 C) on September 30, 2009, followed by 87 F (30.6 C) the following day.

From September 11 to 13, 1971 a total of 14.10 inches (358.1 mm) fell over three days from such a system, 14.73 inches (374.1 mm) in four days from September 20 to 23 of 1967, and 6.00 inches (152.4 mm) fell on August 27 and 28, 1909. In contrast, no calculable rain fell in Hebbronville from June 10 to September 7 of 1921.

Three substantial storms in February and March of 1923 produced a total of 11.06 inches (280.9 mm), and the ten-day reconstructionfrom December 13 to 22 of 1991 saw 7.13 inches or 181.1 millimetres of rainfall; however, only 1.71 inches or 43.4 millimetres fell between October 1970 and the end of March 1971.

Frosts do occasionally occur amid the winter 9.9 mornings fall to or below freezing amid an average winter but calculable snow has declined in Hebbronville only three times in 112 years on March 10, 1932, on January 20, 1940 amid South Texas' coolest month on record, and on Christmas Day of 2004 when 5 inches or 0.13 metres fell in a famous "White Christmas".

Since 1905 the wettest calendar year has been 1995 with 42.75 inches (1,085.8 mm) and the driest 1996 with 11.52 inches (292.6 mm), whilst September 1967 has proved the wettest month with 19.35 inches (491.5 mm).

Climate data for Hebbronville, Texas (1971 to 2000; extremes since 1905) Average high F ( C) 68.0 Average low F ( C) 43.8 Average rainy days ( 0.01 inch) 6.6 5.3 4.2 4.5 5.6 5.4 4.0 4.6 6.2 5.0 4.0 5.4 60.8 Hebbronville is positioned on territory which once formed part of Las Noriecitas, one of the earliest ranches established in the area.

Hebbronville itself was created in 1883, when the Texas-Mexican Railway Company assembled a barns through the area.

The old train station at Penitas was then loaded onto a flatcar, moved 1 miles west and titled Hebbronville.

For a time, Hebbronville ranked as the biggest cattle-shipping center in the nation and it continues to be a core of ranching activity.

Hebbron hangs in the Jim Hogg County Courthouse, 102, East Tilley Street, Hebbronville.

In the CDP, the populace was spread out with 31.1% under the age of 18, 8.1% from 18 to 24, 24.2% from 25 to 44, 21.1% from 45 to 64, and 15.5% who were 65 years of age or older.

Hebbronville, as with all of Jim Hogg County, is served by the Jim Hogg County Independent School District.

The precinct has three schools, all inside the town: Hebbronville Elementary School, Hebbronville Junior High School, and Hebbronville High School.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; Temperature ( F) Ranking (low to high): Texas Division 9: South "Climatography of the United States No.

Municipalities and communities of Jim Hogg County, Texas, United States State of Texas County seats of Texas

Categories:
Census-designated places in Jim Hogg County, Texas - Census-designated places in Texas - County seats in Texas - Populated places established in 1883 - 1883 establishments in Texas