Why do Mission people get so bent out of shape?

4,889 Views | 12 Replies | Last: 15 yr ago by BroInChrist94
Ghetto Vaquero
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Over referring to Sharyland as a description of where a store or restaurant is located?

I was trying to explain to someone that I was going to try and find something at the Sharyland Target when that person interrupts me to tell me the Target is located in Mission. Well, EXCUSE THE HELL OUT OF ME. I understand the school district is sharyland and not the town....but in my defense, most folks know what you're talking about when you say the store in Sharyland vs Mission.

I mean, really, what's the big deal? Is it an inferiority complex the school district has created? Is Sharyland really that much better than Mission?
Swarely
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I grew up in Sharyland and never had that problem. In fact, most of my friends from Mission used Sharyland to describe locations of things.
GurmTsu
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Isn't Mission a suburb of Sharyland?
oldvalleyrat
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AG
Before long Mission and Sharyland are going to be a suburb of LaJoya.
OXDL45
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AG
I grew up in Mission and when I finished school moved back to Mission. Here is my problem with this topic and how I try to explain it to people.

When describing a location in McAllen or any other town that has multiple schools or ISDs you wouldn't say "the Target that's in Rowe" or "I have a friend that lives in Memorial". If you or anyone else did it just wouldn't make sense to describe it in that manner.

Many people do not know that Sharyland is only an ISD nor that it overlaps three cities. I just feel if you say "I'm from Sharyland" you really have no sense of your surroundings.

Also I've seen some people say it to distinguish themselves as a "higher" class of society from the rest of their neighbors.
12gauge
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AG
Being born in McAllen, graduating from highschool from Sharyland and now living in Mission with my wife and son, I believe I can comment. This topic of conversation is always met with sour grapes, feelings of superiority by deluded individuals and lots and lots of misinformation,(In old Army days, 'misinformation' was simply Wrong infomration.) which; ends up with an argument and hurt feelings.. So to clarify and "edumicate" some of the blind, here is a Handbook of Texas Article on the area known as Sharyland:

quote:
SHARYLAND, TEXAS. Sharyland is 36,000 acres on U.S. Highway 83 and Farm roads 495 and 494 in the lower Rio Grande valley, partly in Mission and McAllen, between the Rio Grande on the south and Four Mile Road in southern Hidalgo County. Most of the community now lies in Mission. Between 1914 and 1917 John H. Shary, land promoter and developer of the Corpus Christi area, purchased the 16,000-acre Swift estate, Conway and Hoit's 20,000-acre partial development of the Oblate Fathers' La Lomita Ranch (once part of the farming operation of the La Lomita Mission), and the James B. Wells-John Closnerqv holdings. Shary renamed the area Sharyland and began developing citrus farms, eventually planting 15,000 trees, which he sold and leased in forty-acre farms. In 1922 he hand-cleaned and hand-sized carloads of fruit from his orchards. In 1923 he formed TCX, the Texas Citrus Exchange, one of the first large-scale growing and marketing associations in the industry. Irrigation water was essential to raising citrus in the valley. John Conway, the founder of Mission, had started an irrigation project; Shary bought it, and made it profitable as the United Irrigation Company, which furnished water for more than 55,000 acres of land for nearly forty years, until in 1952 it was absorbed by the newly formed Hidalgo County Water Control District 19. Shary found his 36,000 acres a dense jungle of vegetation with mesquite sometimes two feet in diameter, as well as guajillo, ebony, retama, tornillo, and huisache trees, flowering semitropical plants, cactus, and brush; he turned it into an irrigated farmland. Shary and his wife Mary O'Brien built a home that remains a valley showplace in North Sharyland, now separated from Mission by the village of Palmhurst. The mansion had its own bowling alley and accommodated thousands of guests. It overlooks an artificial lake and citrus acreage and was the setting for the wedding in 1937 of the couple's only child, Marialice, to Allan Shivers, then an up-and-coming state senator. The home became known as the Little White House after President Dwight D. Eisenhower stayed there three days as the guest of Shivers, then governor, during the dedication ceremonies at Falcon Dam. The Sharyland Independent School District was formed in 1922 and in 1990 had 3,000 pupils in two elementary schools, one middle school, and one high school. The Sharyland Water Supply Corporation furnishes the area drinking water. In the 1950s small farms became unprofitable, and two large growers and shippers, Valley Onion and John B. Hardwick Company, emerged, together with the Shary Farms, which still owned 1,000 acres. In 1973 Allan and Marialice Shivers sold Shary Farms to Ray Hunt's Hunt Investment Company, headquartered in New Jersey. Harry Shimitzu, valley native and a large grower and shipper, was hired to run the 6,000-acre Sharyland Plantation. In 1980, when rail transportation became obsolete, Sharyland Plantation built a new facility on Shary Road and Military Highway, two miles south of Cimarron Country Club. More than 1,000 persons were employed by the plantation in 1989. There were at that time a dozen citrus groves, mostly Ruby Red Grapefruit, in Sharyland; half a dozen major additions such as Fox Run, Stonegate, Sendero, and Shary Village; and numerous business lining the major highways.

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Vertical Files, Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin (Hidalgo County, John Shary). Lucy H. Wallace, "John H. Shary-Believer," in Valley By-Liners, Roots by the River (Mission, Texas: Border Kingdom Press, 1978). Mrs. James Watson, The Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas and Its Builders (Mission, Texas, 1931).

Mary Jayne Walsh



With that article in mind, it is okay to differentiate Sharyland from McAllen or Mission when referring to that area due to its previous agricultural purpose, it's historical significance and it's separate school district.(Rowe and Memorial are in the McAllen school district, so it would be stupid to refer to the Target as the one at Rowe, Mission Memorial and McAllen Memorial are NOT historically significant areas....Sorry OX.) It's the same as referring to significant areas in other cities, such as Chinatown, Sand Diego; The Meatpacking district, NY; Hungry Hill, Chicago; and Underground, Atlanta.

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

GIG 'EM



[This message has been edited by 12gauge (edited 4/6/2010 12:25p).]
OXDL45
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AG
Very good points and information regarding the history. Fortunately, I am aware of the history and the huge importance of certain individuals and families to the development of the RGV and the citrus industry. I've personally toured the Shary-Shivers mansion on multiple occasions.

My point is simply that Sharyland in the history books and as an ISD is recorded and recognized BUT it isn't a town. You either live in Mission, McAllen, or Palmhurst, not in the name of the school district. I use the example with the schools to explain it to individuals that are dead set that they are living in an city or town called "Sharyland". Regardless the point is the same, why would you answer with the school district or school boundaries name unless asked specifically?

That's all, just want people to recognize which proper town they live in when asked.

As a side note try going to city hall in Sharyland, Texas and see where that gets you.
12gauge
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AG
I guess you could make the same observation about Bluetown, La Paloma, Cavasos, Russelltown, Scissors, El Gato, Westlakes, etc. They do not have a zip code, governing body,town hall, or school district, but people know what places we're talking about and those areas are differentiated from the city they're in or near by their name (Google map 'em). Sharyland's beginning was similar to many of these aforementioned areas, it only was developed and grew larger than them, so I guess it's in the "spotlight" more and recognized more. I think the main reason for frustration is the fact that there are alot of people who have an air of arrogance when they say they're from "Cherrryland" and really don't know the history, or what the hell Sharyland is . (I'm talking to you, fresas...)
oldvalleyrat
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AG
It is much more common than most people in Sharyland would like to believe. There are a lot of school districts that comprise parts of larger cities. For example Northeast School District in San Antonio, or Northside School District. Both of these districts are part of San Antonio but have their own school district. Both of these districts see themselves as "set apart and better" than the rest of San Antonio (and for good reason).

I almost included Alamo Heights but it is different because it is not only a school district but an incorporated city within the boundaries of San Antonio.

You can probably think of several other school districts in San Antonio like East Central, Southside, and Harlandale. The difference is that Sharyland has a history of being somehow separate from Mission. People in the Harlandale section of San Antonio actually think of themselves as a separate area of San Antonio.

Things have changed a lot in the past ten or fifteen years in Sharyland ISD. There are other schools in the valley that score better than Sharyland, and they are suffering from the rapid growth that McAllen went through some time ago.
BroInChrist94
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AG
OX, please don't bring my Shary peeps down. We can't help who we are or where we live.

Listen, I'm inviting you over to my house so we can have a sitdown and settle this Sharyland-Mission-McAllen-Palmhurst misunderstanding once and for all. I'll supply the Heineken; you can bring the Natty Light.

Just a few things, we must meet early; never after sundown. You must remove at least 2 of your 3 mufflers on your truck. Also, please take your limo-black tint off your windows. Finally, prior to coming, register as a visitor at the Sharyland ISD office so they can place a temporary ankle monitoring brace on you.

Hope to see you soon OX!!!
Ghetto Vaquero
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quote:
OX, please don't bring my Shary peeps down. We can't help who we are or where we live.

Listen, I'm inviting you over to my house so we can have a session and settle this Sharyland-Mission-McAllen-Palmhurst misunderstanding once and for all. I'll supply the Heineken; you can bring the Natty Light and lube.

Just a few things, we must meet early; never after sundown or the SO will find out. You must remove at least 2 of your 3 articles of clothing in your truck. Also, please take your limo-black tint off your windows, I want to see you. Finally, prior to coming, register as a visitor at the Sharyland ISD office so they can place a temporary ankle monitoring brace on you so they can find you tied to my bed the next day.

Hope to see you soon OX!!!





FIFY

and you two need a room!!!
AgeofEase08
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AG
+1 12guage
BBBAggie
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AG
I just want to be Mayor of Sharyland one day.
BroInChrist94
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AG
Sorry.

too short
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