| Newly-installed street sign and traffic signal, Chenault Boulevard, on Veterans Memorial Highway (Loop 534). Click on any image to enlarge. |
A friend let me know a street sign has been installed, along with traffic lights, at the entrance to the second Lennar Homes project on Veterans Memorial Highway (Loop 534). The sign reads “Chenault.”
The new Windridge Subdivision neighborhood will have streets named in memory of Kerr County men who gave their lives for our country. The process takes a long time -- names are submitted, then checked against current street names throughout the county, then approved as part of the platting process.
“Chenault Boulevard” honors two men from Kerrville: James E. Chenault, who died in Korea, and Robert Glen Chenault, who died in Vietnam. Both were only twenty-one years old when they died.
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| James E. Chenault |
James E. Chenault was just twenty-one years old when he was killed in Korea.
He grew up here, attended Tivy High School, and enlisted in the Army in December of 1950, not long after the Korean War began. By the summer of 1951, he was serving as an infantry corporal on the front lines. Earlier that year he had already been wounded and hospitalized. He suffered frostbite during the United Nations advance into North Korea, and was later wounded in combat, spending nearly a month recovering before returning to his unit. On June 3, he went back to the front.
He was killed in action on August 17, 1951. Just three days before his death, he wrote a final letter home to his parents on Ross Street.
The local papers made clear he was more than a statistic. His death was felt deeply. He was the first serviceman from Kerr County killed in Korea whose body was returned home for burial, and the community turned out in large numbers to honor him.
Funeral services were held at Trinity Baptist Church, followed by full military rites conducted by the American Legion. He was laid to rest at Glen Rest Cemetery. Later, at Fort Sam Houston, his parents received the Bronze Star with “V” for valor, a quiet but lasting recognition of the courage he showed under fire.
James Chenault left behind his parents, John and Hazel Chenault, a brother also serving in Korea, four sisters, and a grandmother. What remains is the story of a young Kerrville man who was wounded, returned, and did not turn away from his duty.
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| Robert Glen Chenault |
Robert Glen Chenault was a Sonora native, a Tivy High School graduate, who attended Schreiner Institute and the University of Texas before entering the U.S. Marine Corps. In September 1967, the local paper noted his completion of recruit training and his readiness for service.
Just months later, he was killed in action on January 21, 1968, near Quang Nam, Vietnam, while serving with the Third Marine Division. He had been in Vietnam only about two months. He was twenty-one years old.
He was remembered not only as a Marine, but as a son, a brother, and an active member of First Baptist Church, where he taught Sunday School. His funeral was held in Kerrville with full military honors, and flags across the city flew at half-staff.
He worked at my parents’ print shop, and he and my father had a special bond.
I have a letter he wrote to my parents on Christmas Eve, 1967, where he expresses his hope that he would celebrate Christmas 1968 back in Kerrville.
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Here are the names of the men who will be honored. Only last names will be used, so each street in this new neighborhood will carry the name of a local hero. There are still many additional heroes to honor, but this is a step in the right direction, adding more streets in addition to those named for Francisco Lemos, Sidney Baker, and Earl Garrett. I'm grateful Lennar Homes agreed to honor these men in this way.
I thought it was especially significant that this subdivision (behind the new Hal Peterson Middle School) will face Loop 534, which is named "Veterans Highway" in honor of those who served our country in uniform.
James E. Chenault (Korea) • Robert Glen Chenault (Vietnam)
Edwin Dischinger Jr. (Korea)
Leon W. Pollard Jr. (Korea)
Lawrence L. Dwyer Jr. (Vietnam)
Anthony E. Kunz (Vietnam)
Curtis C. Dees (Vietnam)
Jacob C. Leicht (Global War on Terrorism Operation Enduring Freedom)
Lawrence D. Ezell (Operation Iraqi Freedom)
Michael Pfeuffer • Ronald H. Pfeuffer (Vietnam)
Windridge Subdivision, Unit 2
Pete Castillo (World War II)
Anthony E Kunz (Vietnam)
Alfredo M Villareal (World War II)
Cody J. Orr (Operation Iraqi Freedom)
Edwin Kaiser (World War I)
William M. Reeves (World War I)
Leon W. Ritz (World War II)
John D. Masters (World War II)
Ben F. Zumwalt (World War II)
Joe Herring Jr. is a Kerrville native who is interested in local history. This column originally appeared in the Kerr County Lead February 5, 2026