Sunday, December 22, 2024 at 5:22 PM
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Family, friends remember Ralph Fair Jr.

‘Father of Fair Oaks Ranch’ dies at 90; service set June 14
Fair Oaks Ranch Mayor Greg Maxton, left, listens as Ralph Fair Jr. addresses City Council during a recent Fair Oaks Ranch council meeting.

Source: Courtesy photo

 

Daughter Susie Richardson said her father “was very adventuresome; he loved doing things. He had no fear, he loved doing things for the first time.”

Associate Bob Weiss was “in the right place at the right time” and was given “an opportunity to succeed without a lot of supervision. I was just expected to succeed.”

Mayor Greg Maxton called him “the father of the city of Fair Oaks Ranch.”

Their comments are about Ralph Fair Jr., Fair Oak Ranch’s namesake, who died May 29 at the age of 90.

A memorial service is set for 2 p.m. June 14 at First Baptist Church of Boerne, 631 S. School St. in Boerne.

“His presence in our lives was a blessing on many levels,” Fair Oaks Ranch Mayor Greg Maxton said. “Ralph Fair Jr. had a vision of turning a working ranch into a community. He succeeded against all odds at achieving what many in the early 1970s said was an absurd idea.”

Maxton moved to Fair Oaks Ranch in 2013, attracted by the lure of its uniqueness and tranquil environment.

“Through his persistence, he implemented his vision of designing and building a unique community which would eventually become the city we know today,” Maxton said. “I personally admired his energy and his caring attitude in all that he did.”

Richardson, the oldest of three Fair daughters, still lives in a home in Fair Oaks Ranch, which was incorporated in 1988 after Fair decided in 1975 to develop a portion of the 5,000-acre Fair ranch as a residential community.

“We inhabited what is now the country club; I lived there until I was 13,” Richardson said of the centerpiece to the city, now Fair Oaks Ranch Golf and Country Club. “We’ve always had a home on the ranch.”

The ranch was originally owned by Fair’s father, oil man Ralph Fair Sr. The working ranch was first a center for the senior Fairʼs racehorse operation before becoming a registered Hereford cattle operation.

Fair Oaks Ranch Mayor Greg Maxton, left, listens as Ralph Fair Jr. addresses the crowd gathered at a recent city council meeting. Fair, who Maxton called “the Father of Fair Oaks Ranch,” died May 29.

Courtesy photo After Ralph Fair Sr.’s passing, “in 1975 the ranch gates were locked and they began development,” she said.

Her father, she said, “was full of energy and had a spirit of accomplishment. He just didn’t turn things down, ever.” She said her father “definitely grew up in an era (when a handshake meant something); his word was gold.”

“My dad would say, ‘I’m going to do this, if you want to come along, you’re welcome to come with me,’” she recalled.

One thing she heard him say on more than one occasion was “He who falls behind, gets left behind.”

“He was always urgent. Every day, he wanted to know, OK, what are we going to accomplish today?” she added.

No one knew that attitude better than Weiss, who was left the reins of Ralph Fair Inc. in 1981 when Fair moved his family to Costa Rica.

“The biggest thing we did to help the formation of the city, we put deed restrictions on each,” Weiss said, “with the idea that we were going to have a residential community.”

“We were looking at it from the standpoint of, let’s make it a location you can enjoy,” added Weiss, who began working for Ralph Fair Inc. in 1977. “Everything is mostly custom- built; the uniqueness, the house on the lots were mostly unique homes.”

The fact the development was started and completed without having to go to a bank or lender to do so, made things easier for Fair and his development.

“The land we developed was paid for, free and clear, so that gave us a lot of opportunity,” Weiss said. “We were the developer; we capitalized off the fact the land was free and clear.”

One attraction was the spaciousness, a goal from the beginning.

“I think there were 2,600 lots on the 5,000 acres. That density is another unique quality of Fair Oaks Ranch,” he said. “The majority of the lots were larger lots, and that’s why people have a good feel about it.”

Richardson said the establishment of the golf course and country club were a definite asset and attraction.

“We started the Fair Oaks Ranch Golf and Country Club, which has brought so many people to the area,” said Richardson, who said Fair was not much of a golfer, but her grandmother was. “But golf is the ultimate attraction.”

PGA professional Gary Player, one of only five professional golfers to have ever won all four PGA major championships, designed the course’s original 18 holes.

“The development was designed around those 18 holes. It was designed so that many homes could have a golf course view,” Richardson said.

Later in life, Fair took on an evangelistic approach to life, spending time — and dollars — to spread Christianity through regions of South America where people lived in squalor and crushing poverty.

“When we started our own family,” Richardson said, “he began his evangelistic efforts, to promote Christianity and help women and orphan children, abused women, in poorer regions of South America.

“He always encouraged us to give and to help other people,” she said, adding, “I love the fulfillment of helping other people.”

In lieu of flowers, contributions in Ralph’s memory may be made to Charity Ball Association of San Antonio, PO Box 2357, San Antonio, Texas 78298; www.cbaofsa.org.



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