In 1964, the
Texas Department of Public Safety chartered the City of Waco, Texas, to construct and operate the official museum of the Texas Rangers. The City of Waco agreed to commit for a building site, provide an ongoing annual operating subsidy, and build and sustain a headquarters for Texas Rangers Company "F". More than four million visitors have attended the historical center since it opened in 1968. The museum complex was originally named
Fort Fisher, after an 1837 Ranger camp from which the City of Waco traces its origin. It was designed in a vernacular style of
Texas hill country architecture, reminiscent of a 19th-century Texas Ranger headquarters. The first museum gallery was named after Col.
Homer Garrison Jr., who served and later directed the Texas Department of Public Safety and its Texas Rangers division from 1938 to 1968. In 1971, the Texas Legislature appointed the
Texas Ranger Commemorative Commission to honor the 150th anniversary of the Texas Rangers. The commission was charged with raising funds and erecting the official state Hall of Fame of the Texas Rangers. The project was opened for the
American Bicentennial in 1976. Soon afterward, the name of the historical complex was changed to the Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum to reflect its broader role. In 1975, the
Moody Foundation of Galveston donated seed money to establish the Moody Texas Ranger Memorial Library. Along with the State Library and Archives in Austin, it has become a primary research center on the history and popular culture of the Texas Rangers. In 1997, it was renamed as the Texas Ranger Research Center, with the permission of the Moody Foundation, to recognize its expanding role. After the museum's 30 years of service, the Texas Legislature passed a 1997 resolution designating the Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum as the official
repository for memorabilia, archives and other materials relating to the Texas Rangers. Texas Ranger artifacts and archives donated to the institution become property of the People of Texas through the trusteeship of the City of Waco. ==Col. Homer Garrison Jr. Gallery==