The property, known within the Ward family as “Down Below,” has been owned and stewarded by the family for generations. The Ward family traces its roots to Emily Austin Perry, Stephen F. Austin’s sister, whose family was among Austin’s “Old Three Hundred” settlers. Through decades of ranching, hunting and land stewardship, the family worked to maintain the property’s ecological character while preserving it as a working landscape.
For the Ward family, permanently conserving the land honors the legacy of the late Lee Taylor Ward, a lifelong rancher, outdoorsman, and conservation-minded steward who cared deeply about the future of the Texas coast. By protecting the property as part of the Justin Hurst WMA, the family is guaranteeing that the landscapes and wildlife that shaped generations of memories will remain intact for future Texans.
“He loved that land,” said Emily Ward. “He loved getting up every morning and going out there. He believed this landscape mattered, not just for our family, but for wildlife, for ranching, and for the future of the Texas coast.”
Established following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, the RESTORE Act, which made Gulf Coast restoration funds toward projects that restore and protect coastal ecosystems and communities. Conserving this property advances those coastal resilience goals by protecting coastal prairie and marsh habitat that store floodwaters, improve water quality and help buffer coastal communities from severe storms.
“Protecting these 2,500 acres of coastal prairie, wetlands, and tidal marsh through the RESTORE Act is a significant win for Texas conservation,” said Steven Schar, Governor Abbott’s designee to the RESTORE Council and Deputy Executive Director of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. “This expansion of the Justin Hurst Wildlife Management Area enhances critical habitat, improves coastal resilience, and preserves this important landscape for future generations. We appreciate the Ward family’s stewardship and the strong partnership with the Coastal Prairie Conservancy and Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.”
Additional support for the project was provided through partnerships with the Partnership for Gulf Coast Land Conservation and the Galveston Bay Estuary Program Conservation Assistance Program.
The expansion of Justin Hurst WMA represents another significant step in protecting and reconnecting coastal habitats across Southeast Texas. As development pressure continues to increase along the Gulf Coast, projects like this help ensure that working lands, wildlife habitat and the ecological heritage of the Texas coast remain intact for future generations.
“The RESTORE Council is delighted to support the Coastal Prairie Conservancy, the Texas Commission for Environmental Quality, and the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department in their collaborative efforts to permanently protect the coastal prairie and wetland habitats that have been cherished and faithfully stewarded by the Ward family for so many years,” said Council Executive Director Mary Walker. “By safeguarding these lands and allowing them to continue serving as valuable fish and wildlife habitat in perpetuity, the State of Texas is investing in the continued health of Gulf Coast ecosystems, which in turn support healthy Gulf Coast communities.”
About the Coastal Prairie Conservancy
The Coastal Prairie Conservancy is a nonprofit land trust dedicated to sustaining a resilient Texas by preserving coastal prairie, wetlands, farms, and ranches to benefit people and wildlife forever. Preserved lands play an important role in flood control, cleaner air and water, outdoor recreation, and wildlife habitat. To learn more about the Coastal Prairie Conservancy’s conservation efforts, visit www.coastalprairieconservancy.org or find us on Facebook and Instagram @coastalprairieconservancy.
About the RESTORE Council
The Gulf Coast Ecosystem Restoration Council (RESTORE Council) is a small federal agency established in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon disaster to plan for and carry out restoration across the Gulf Coast. Led by the Governors of the five Gulf states and heads of 6 federal agencies, the RESTORE Council funds and oversees over $3.2 billion in ecosystem restoration funding for projects focused on habitat protection, wetland restoration, water quality improvement, and a range of other large-scale ecosystem and economic activities from Texas to Florida. The funding for these investments comes from civil penalties paid by parties responsible for the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, managed through the Gulf Coast Restoration Trust Fund.