Texas Vineyards
Texas is one the oldest wine growing states in the US, with vines planted here more than a hundred years before they were planted in California or Virginia.
In the 1650s, Franciscan priests planted Mission vines in West Texas, near modern day El Paso. The vines were a necessity in the production of sacramental wine used in the Eucharist. The horticulturist Thomas Munson used Texas vines to create hundreds of hybrid grapes and conducted significant research in finding root stock immune to the Phylloxera epidemic, which saved the French wine industry from total ruin.
The advent of Prohibition in the United States virtually eliminated Texas' wine industry which didn't experience a revival until the 1970's, beginning with the founding of Llano Estacado and Pheasant Ridge wineries in the High Plains region near Lubbock. The Texas wine industry still feels the effects of Prohibition today with a quarter of Texas' 254 counties still having dry laws on the books.
Texas Wine and Grape Growers Association:
The official site of the Texas Wine and Grape Growers Association.
Texas Wine and Grape Growers Association
Texas Department of Agriculture
Guide to Texas Wineries by the Texas Department of Agriculture.
Texas Department of Agriculture
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