Mud,
cow led to
sale of
refinery
acreage
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
Enterprise,
Saturday June
19, 1999.
NEDERLAND—During
the early
twentieth
century, most
everyone in
Jefferson
County knew of
an instance or
two wherein a
landowner,
seeking to
realize an
exorbitant
profit on
prairie land,
drove a major
industry to
the Houston
area. In one
case the swish
of a cow’s
tail saved the
old Pure Oil
(later Unocal)
refinery at
Smith’s Bluff.
The
site of
Smith’s Bluff,
located north
of Nederland
between
Highway 366
and Neches
River, was
issued by the
county’s Board
of Land
Commissioners
to John
Kutcher and G.
W. Smyth about
1840.
About
1921, Pure Oil
Company, which
owned major
oil production
in East Texas
and Oklahoma,
needed a
location with
a deep-sea
outlet for a
gasoline
refinery. And
Smith’s Bluff
was the ideal
site, with
plenty of land
and a
deep-water
channel to the
Gulf of
Mexico.
In
1922 two
company land
agents visited
Flora Block
Staffen there
and offered
her $250 an
acre for her
350 acres of
land. Mrs.
Staffen
refused,
however, not
out of greed,
but because it
was the only
home she and
her husband
had ever
known, both
having been
born at that
location
during the
1850’s.
The
agents visited
her twice
more, offering
$350 an acre
and eventually
$500 an acre.
On their final
visit the land
agents thought
Mrs. Staffen
had agreed to
sell.
In
the meantime a
Beaumont car
salesman
visited Mrs.
Staffen,
convincing her
that if Pure
Oil Company
really wanted
her land, the
agents should
offer her a
new Buick as a
"bonus." But
the land
agents
refused,
believing that
their final
offer of $500
had been
sufficiently
generous.
At
that time, A.
L. Brooks, a
Port Neches
bank
president, and
Rev. W. E.
Hassler, a
Methodist
minister,
realized that
a major
industry was
about to slip
away from
Midcounty if
they did not
act
immediately.
They canvassed
the business
district and
raised $1,000
to buy Mrs.
Staffen a new
Ford. Mrs.
Staffen,
however,
wanted only a
Buick, which
cost $2,000
additional.
Later Rev.
Hassler
explained:
"...Brooks
and I visited
her during a
cold,
drizzling
rain, and we
found her
milking a cow
in a muddy
pen. She told
us that she
had decided
not to sell at
any price
since she did
not need the
money. I then
assured her
that we would
raise the
$2,000
additional
needed to buy
her a
Buick..."
"...We
then reminded
her that if
she sold out
and relocated,
she could buy
her milk in
bottles and
never again
would need to
milk a cow out
in the rain.
About that
time the old
cow swung her
tail and
rapped Mrs.
Staffen across
the head,
leaving her
and her bonnet
sprawled in
the mud. As we
helped her to
rise out of
the mud, she
exclaimed,
"This place is
now sold to
Pure Oil
Company...!"
For
the next
seventy years,
Smith’s Bluff
remained a
major refining
plant, which
produced
aviation
gasoline
during World
War II and
employed at
its peak about
1,000 persons.
In 1965 Pure
Oil was merged
with Union Oil
of California,
and since
1990, the
latter has
dismantled all
of the
outdated
distilling
units. Today
the location
is used
principally as
an offloading
and storage
facility.
W.
T. Block of
Nederland is a
historian and
author. His
website is
http://wtblock.com/wtblockjr/ This database is very large (350 articles) and
is intended as
an area
history source
for students.
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