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Known as Freddy Fender or El Bebop Kid (the Mexican Elvis Presley), Baldemar Garza Huerta achieved great success as a Tejano, rock and country singer for over fifty years. Born on this site in San Benito on June 4, 1937, he first performed in a Harlingen talent show at radio station KGBT where he won first prize. For years, he performed and won local talent shows. At the age of sixteen, with his mother's consent, he joined the Marine Corps. He was discharged in 1956, returned home and began playing to Tejano audiences at bars, nightclubs and honky-tonks in Texas and Mexico. In 1957, under the name El Bebop Kid, he recorded several Spanish-language versions of popular country and rock songs, popularly known as rockabilly. One year later, he changed his name to Freddy Fender. It was in Harlingen where he wrote and recorded his 1959 blues hit "Wasted Days and Wasted Nights." After serving nearly three years at Angola State Prison, Fender left music and began work as a mechanic. He returned to the music industry with his 1974 hit, "Before the Next Teardrop Falls," a number one single. Between 1975 and 1983, Fender charted 21 country hits. Fender's music appealed to a wide audience with his emotional and experience-driven songs. His fame also allowed him to contribute to many charitable causes. After a series of medical issues, he died on October 14, 2006 in Corpus Christi at the age of 69. Freddy Fender played for U.S. presidents and had a star placed on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Even with his fame, Fender never forgot his humble roots and hometown. One of San Benito's favorite sons, he is buried in the San Benito City Cemetery. (2013)