Orderly Production Brings Prosperity to East Texas Field

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
George C. Gibbons
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
2
File Size:
322 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1941

Abstract

ALMOST everyone in any of the five counties embracing the great East Texas field depends heavily upon oil for his living whether or not he actually owns a well or piece of royalty himself. Oil is a natural resource that, when utilized, spreads its benefits over a vast area and into many channels. Depending then almost entirely upon agriculture: what is now known as the East Texas oil field a decade ago had a scattered farming population. For many of its people, tomatoes and other vegetable crops coupled with the old southern stand-by of cotton, furnished an adequate living and a small cash surplus. Some farm families on the red hills, however, were not far re- moved from the sowbelly and black- eyed peas, or cornpone and potlikker, standard of living. Kilgore of that day, was a village of less than 850 per- sons. Longview, with just over 5000, apparently had reached the limit of its growth. Tyler was an overgrown farming town of around 17,000 persons, de- pending largely upon the agricultural income of Smith County and surrounding territory for which it was a trading center.
Citation

APA: George C. Gibbons  (1941)  Orderly Production Brings Prosperity to East Texas Field

MLA: George C. Gibbons Orderly Production Brings Prosperity to East Texas Field. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1941.

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