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Harold "Jerome" Urbanosky Jr. '75 June 20, 2018 2:49 PM updated: June 20, 2018 2:58 PM
Jerome Urbanosky to Serve as SGBI President
By Jessie Topp-Becker, Managing Editor
Grandparents raised Polled Herefords and commercial cattle near Caldwell, Texas - the place where he fell in love with cattle.
Jerome caught his first glimpse of Santa Gertrudis cattle while traveling to his grandparents ' ranch as a young boy. "We would drive past Nine Bar Ranches in Cypress, Texas, and I always looked forward to seeing the Santa Gertrud is," he says. "I always knew if I ever had cattle I would have Santa Gertrudis - they were, and are, the ultimate.”
In 1969, at the age of 15, Jerome won a $200 certificate at the calf scramble during the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. With his scramble certificate and a $150 loan from his dad, he purchased his first Santa Gertrudis heifer from Ganado Rojo, a ranch near Alief , Texas. The following year he purchased a second Santa Gertrudis heifer, this time from Mirasol Ranch in Uvalde, Texas. Alice and Miss Masterpiece 612 (along with their off spring) served as the foundation for the Urbanosky Ranch herd.
Jerome married his wife, Jane, in 1976 . In 1985 the couple moved their family to Plantersville, Texas, where they still live and raise Santa Gertrudis. The couple has four children - two
Sons, Jerome III "Roos ter" and Blake
- who were all active members of the National Junior Santa Gertrudis Association (NJSGA).
Patti and Cristi both served as NJSGA queens, while Blake served as junior association president. Today, all four children remain SGBI members and either live on Urbanosky Ranch or five minutes away.
The next generation of the Urbanosky family has also started to get involved with the association; several of Jerome and Jane's grandchildren are NJSGA members.
"We really are a family ranching operation dedicated to Santa Gertrudis," Jerome says.
Since first joining SGBI in 1970, Jerome has been actively involved. In addition to his participation in the
Breed Standards and Long-Range Planning Committees, he has served as vice president of the Membership Committee since his election to the Board of Directors in 2014.
Being an active affiliate member has also been a priority over the years.
Jerome is a member of the Mid-Coast Santa Gertrudis Association and the Polled Santa Gertrudis Asso ciatio n.
Throughout his 30 years of member ship with the Mid-Coast affiliate, he has served as president and vice president, as well as a Board member for several terms.
Jerome is very excited to take his leadership involvement with SGBI to the next level. "I am
so thrilled and humbled to be selected as SGBI presiden t," he says. "Anyone who knows me is aware of how much I love Santa Gertrudis. Anything I can do to serve the breed and association, I' m all in."
In addition to the ranch, Jerome has many years of expe rience in the agric ulture industry. After graduating from Texas A&M University in 1975 , he started a feed business with his two brothers; the business even-
re tail stores and a large commercial feed mill. He got out of the family business in 20 00 and founded AmeriTech Staffing in Houston, Texas.
He is confident that the knowledge and skills he has learned over the years will be an asset in his new role. "I have accomplished some success in the business world and want to use those skills to serve SGBI."
As incoming president, Jerome has identified several goals for the association in the coming year. "My main goal is to increase the marketing and promotion of the world's greatest beef breed," he explains.
Promoting Santa Gertrudis' advantages as "the breed of choice" to the beef industry is another priority. "Since SGBl' s foundation sire 'Monkey' was born 98 years ago, our breed and genetic pool have become more stable, "
Jerome says. "Our cattle are more
uniform and our data is industry leading. We need to become more vocal and proud of Santa Gertrudis today."
It is imperative that all SGBI members become advocates for Santa Gertrudis. "We must all do more to market and promote the breed ; SGBI can't do it alone," he says. "As an association we have strength and a voice when we are a unified group."