The park authorized in 1969 preserves both ends of a life: the Johnson City District, where a restored 1880s Victorian boyhood home sits alongside the log cabin settlement of Johnson's grandfather, and the LBJ Ranch District, roughly fourteen miles west along the north side of the Pedernales River. That ranch, which Johnson called his Texas White House — he spent approximately twenty percent of his time in office there — he donated in his will to the public, with one condition: that it remain a working ranch and not become a sterile relic of the past. The Hereford cattle grazing there today are descended from his own herd. The park tells the full arc, from the Hill Country limestone country where he was born to the family cemetery where both he and Lady Bird are buried. No other presidential park makes that claim.
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Editorial content compiled with AI assistance. Place details verified against public records.


