The
Spindletop
oilfield,
discovered on
a salt dome
formation
south of
Beaumont in
eastern
Jefferson
County on
January 10,
1901, marked
the birth of
the modern
petroleum
industry. The
Gladys City
Oil, Gas, and
Manufacturing
Company,
formed in
August 1892 by
George W.
O'Brien,
George W.
Carroll,
Pattillo
Higgins,qv
Emma E. John,
and J. F.
Lanier, was
the first
company to
drill on
Spindletop
Hill. Three
shallow
attempts,
beginning in
1893 and using
cable-tool
drilling
equipment were
unsuccessful;
Lanier and
Higgins had
left the
company by
1895. Anthony
F. Lucas,qv
the leading
United States
expert on salt
dome
formations,
made a lease
with the
Gladys City
Company in
1899. Higgins
and Lucas made
a separate
agreement a
month later.
With Lucas in
charge of the
drilling
operation,
another
attempt was
made on the
John Allen
Veatchqv
survey on
Gladys City
Company lands.
Lucas was able
to drill to a
depth of 575
feet before
running out of
money. He was
also having
great
difficulty
with the
tricky sands
of the salt
dome. Despite
the negative
reports from
contemporary
geologists,
Lucas remained
convinced that
oil was in the
salt domes of
the Gulf
Coast. He
finally
secured the
assistance of
John H. Galeyqv
and James M.
Guffey of
Pittsburg.
Much of the
Guffey and
Galey support
was financed
in turn by the
Mellon
interest;
their terms
excluded
Higgins and
left Lucas
with only a
small share of
the potential
profits.
Nonetheless,
Lucas pressed
ahead in his
effort to
vindicate his
theories.
Galey and
Guffey played
a crucial role
by bringing in
Al and Curt
Hamill, an
experienced
drilling team
from
Corsicana.
Lucas spudded
in a well on
October 27,
1900, on
McFaddin-Wiess
and Kyle land
that adjoined
the Gladys
City Company
lands. A new
heavier and
more efficient
rotary type
bit was used.
From October
to January
1901, Lucas
and the
Hamills
struggled to
overcome the
difficult oil
sands, which
had stymied
previous
drilling
efforts. On
January 10 mud
began bubbling
from the hole.
The startled
roughnecks
fled as six
tons of
four-inch
drilling pipe
came shooting
up out of the
ground. After
several
minutes of
quiet, mud,
then gas, then
oil spurted
out. The Lucas
geyser, found
at a depth of
1,139 feet,
blew a stream
of oil over
100 feet high
until it was
capped nine
days later and
flowed an
estimated
100,000
barrels a day.
Lucas and the
Hamills
finally
controlled the
geyser on
January 19,
when a huge
pool of oil
surrounded it,
and throngs of
oilmen,
speculators,
and onlookers
had
transformed
the city of
Beaumont. A
new age was
born. The
world had
never seen
such a gusher
before. By
September 1901
there were at
least six
successful
wells on
Gladys City
Company lands.
Wild
speculation
drove land
prices around
Spindletop to
incredible
heights. One
man who had
been trying to
sell his tract
there for $150
for three
years sold his
land for
$20,000; the
buyer promptly
sold to
another
investor
within fifteen
minutes for
$50,000. One
well,
representing
an initial
investment of
under $10,000,
was sold for
$1,250,000.
Beaumont's
population
rose from
10,000 to
50,000. Legal
entanglements
and
multimillion-dollar
deals became
almost
commonplace.
An estimated
$235 million
had been
invested in
oil that year
in Texas;
while some had
made fortunes,
others lost
everything.
The
overabundance
of wells at
Spindletop led
to a rapid
decline in
production.
After yielding
17,500,000
barrels of oil
in 1902, the
Spindletop
wells were
down to 10,000
barrels a day
in February
1904. Deposits
from the
shallow
Miocene
caprock seemed
to diminish,
but the
Spindletop
oilfield had
not yet dried
out. A second
boom came when
Marrs McLeanqv
speculated
that
production
could be found
on the flanks
of the dome.
Miles F. Yountqv
also believed
more oil was
present at
deeper depths.
Their
convictions
proved
correct; on
November 13,
1925, the
Yount-Lee Oil
Company
brought in a
flank well
drilled to
5,400 feet.
This and other
discoveries on
the flanks of
the salt dome
set off
another
speculative
boom. The
Gladys City
Company
participated
with the
Yount-Lee Oil
Company and
others in this
second boom.
Although this
second wave
was more
controlled
than the
first,
competition
was keen; one
particular
one-acre tract
sold for
$200,000. By
1927
Spindletop
production
reached its
all-time
annual high of
21,000,000
barrels.
Within five
years
60,000,000
barrels had
been produced,
largely from
the new-found
deeper
Marginulin
sands of the
flank wells.
Additional
deposits were
found in the
Midway
(Eocene)
formations in
1951. Over
153,000,000
barrels of oil
had been
produced from
the Spindletop
fields by
1985.
The
discovery of
the Spindletop
oilfield had
an almost
incalculable
effect on
world history,
as well as
Texas history.
Eager to find
similar
deposits,
investors
spent billions
of dollars
throughout the
Lone Star
state in
search of oil
and natural
gas. The cheap
fuel they
found helped
to
revolutionize
American
transportation
and industry.
Storage
facilities,
pipelines, and
major refining
units were
built in the
Beaumont, Port
Arthur, Sabine
Pass, and
Orange areas
around
Spindletop. By
1902 there
were more than
500 Texas
corporations
doing business
in Beaumont.
Many of the
major oil
companies were
born at
Spindletop or
grew to major
corporate size
as a result of
their
involvement at
Spindletop.
The Texas
Company (later
Texacoqv),
Gulf Oil
Corporation,qv
Sun Oil
Company,
Magnolia
Petroleum
Company,qv
and Humble
(later Exxon
Company,
U.S.A.qv)
were a few of
the major
corporations.
The Spindletop
oilfield again
boomed in the
1950s, with
the production
of sulphur by
Texas Gulf
Sulphur
Company (later
Texasgulf qv),
until about
1975.
Salt-brine
extraction
became a
lucrative
operation in
the 1950s. In
1963-66 even
deeper oil
production was
achieved with
an average
depth of 9,000
feet. The old
field
continued in
the 1990s to
yield very
limited oil
production in
the form of
stripper wells
and salt brine
production.
Some parts of
the salt dome
cavities were
being
developed as
storage
facilities for
petroleum
products. In
commemoration
of the
importance of
the
development of
Spindletop
oilfield, a
Texas pink
granite
monument was
erected in
1941 near the
site of the
Lucas gusher.
The withdrawal
of oil,
sulphur, and
brine from
beneath the
surface,
however,
caused the
Spindletop
dome to
subside, and
the monument
was moved to
the recreated
Spindletop/Gladys
City Boomtown
Museum across
the highway on
the Lamar
University
campus at
Beaumont. The
Gladys City
Company, as
well as many
major oil
companies,
continued to
reap the
benefit of
their
involvement in
the discovery
of the
Spindletop
oilfield.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
James Anthony
Clark and
Michel T.
Halbouty,
Spindletop
(New York:
Random House,
1952). Everett
DeGoyler,
"Anthony F.
Lucas and
Spindletop," Southwest
Review
30 (Fall
1945). George
Fancher et
al., The
Oil Resources
of Texas
(Austin: Texas
Petroleum
Research
Committee,
1954). Judith
Walker Linsley
and Ellen
Walker
Rienstra,
Beaumont: A
Chronicle of
Promise
(Woodland
Hills,
California:
Windsor,
1982). Edgar
Wesley Owen,
Trek
of the Oil
Finders: A
History of
Exploration
for Petroleum
(Tulsa:
American
Association
for Petroleum
Geologists,
1975). Joseph
A. Pratt, The
Growth of a
Refining
Region
(Greenwich,
Connecticut:
Jai Press,
1980). Carl
Coke Rister, Oil!
Titan of the
Southwest
(Norman:
University of
Oklahoma
Press, 1949).
Spindletop/Gladys
City Boomtown
Museum: A
Guide and a
History
(Beaumont:
Lamar
University,
1992).
Robert
Wooster and
Christine Moor
Sanders
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