Native Americans The first inhabitants were 6,000–10,000 years ago and later came to include
Lipan Apache,
Mescalero Apache,
Coahuiltecan,
Jumanos, Tamaulipans,
Tonkawa, and
Comanches. These tribes settled in rock shelters in the river and creek valleys, leaving behind artifacts and caches of seeds, implements, burial sites, and
petroglyphs. Most of the Indians that raided the county after the civil war were the Kickapoo, Seminole, and Lipan Apache. These Indians sometimes worked with Mexicans to raid the area. The last Native American raid in the county was likely in April of 1881 when Lipan Apaches were attacked by U.S soldiers after the raid on the Frio Canyon in
Real County. Early explorations Saltillo Alcalde Fernando de Azcué passed through the southeast corner of the county in 1665 on an expedition, becoming the first European to cross the
Rio Grande.
Franciscan Brother Manuel de la Cruz explored the county in 1674. In 1675,
Fernando del Bosque traversed the area on an expedition up the Rio Grande from the city of
Nuestra Sra. de Guadalupe. He was accompanied by Franciscan friars Juan Larios and Dionisio de San Buenaventura.
Alonso De León in 1688 discovered French explorer and
La Salle expedition deserter
Jean Henri in a somewhat confused state of mind, among the Coahuiltecan Indians near the site of present
Brackettville, generally believed to be at Anacacho Mountain. During the late 18th century, several Franciscans established a settlement on Las Moras Creek near the center of the county. In 1834, while the area was still under Mexican control, English land speculators John Charles Beales and James Grant attempted to establish an English-speaking colony called Dolores at the site. Streets were laid off and 59 colonists were brought in, but the project was abandoned.
County established The state legislature formed Kinney County from
Bexar County in 1850, five years after Texas statehood, and named it for
Henry Lawrence Kinney. Brackettville was founded in 1852 originally as the town of Brackett and named for Oscar B. Brackett, who came to set up a stage stop and opened the town's first dry-goods store. Brackett became a stop on a stage line from San Antonio to El Paso, but the settlement grew very slowly because of continuous Indian attacks. The town received its first post office in 1875. On February 18, 1861, on orders from
United States Army General David E. Twiggs, Fort Clark was surrendered to the Texas Commission. Twiggs was dismissed by the United States for the act, and subsequently joined the Confederacy. The fort was evacuated by federal troops on March 19 and occupied by Confederate troops under the command of Confederate Colonel
John R. Baylor. It remained in the hands of the Confederates until the end of the war, but was not garrisoned. In December 1866, it was reestablished as a federal fort.
Black Seminoles In early 1872, a number of
Black Seminoles living along the border were organized into a company of scouts and brought to Fort Clark. Others joined them, and by the mid-1870s, they numbered some 400 to 500. For the next quarter century, they lived on a reservation along Las Moras Creek. In 1914, the Black Seminoles were removed from the Fort Clark reservation, but some of their descendants still live in the county. The Seminole Indian Scouts cemetery was founded on Fort Clark in 1872.
County organization and growth The county was organized in 1874. County government followed in 1875. In 1876, Brackettville was designated county seat after the final boundaries of the county were set by the legislature. through
Spofford in 1883 gave the wool and mohair industry access to markets. At the same time, it also helped to bring in numerous new settlers. In 1925, a branch line of the
Texas and New Orleans Railroad was built from near Spofford to connect with the
Mexican National Railroad at the Rio Grande. A large
Civilian Conservation Corps camp constructed adjacent to Fort Clark helped to employ some people during the
Great Depression. With the onset of
World War II, wool and mohair were in demand for the defense industries. Fort Clark was closed in 1946. Kickapoo Cavern State Park, in both Edwards and Kinney Counties, opened to the public in 1991. It was formerly a private ranch. The Kinney County Groundwater Conservation District was approved by the voters in 2002.
Undocumented migrants Kinney County's southwest border is for the
Rio Grande and the border of Mexico. It is on the route for undocumented border crossers heading for
San Antonio, the closest city. According to the Kinney County official Web page, "Our county is being bombarded by hundreds of illegal aliens on a daily basis. Our local law enforcement is overwhelmed with illegal alien smuggling activity". ==Geography==