Bill Ingram Interview - Bill Ingram Interview [part 3 of 4]

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  • PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL TOPIC: Pine Island, Breckenridge Areas - 1917
  • NAME; Ingram, Bill INTERVIEWER: Boatright, Mody C.
  • PLACE: Breckenridge, Texas TAPE NO, 35 DATE: 7-29-52 RESTRICTIONS: None
  • Ingram- Told me to come over and said, "Don't bring your crew; the
  • crew'll he over there. I told him, I says, "No, Scott, I'll just
  • bring Garner along, Him and I know how to kick one of those things
  • better'n anybody else around. We're used to it. Pumper's gonna
  • help the other two boys, while we're gone, see. That'd make it
  • wouldn't hold up the work, see. So we got over there -- they
  • hadn't got over there, had to come across this lake in a boat and
  • they's a little late. We looked the thing over; opened a little
  • release valve and blowed the cylinder out. I went around and looked
  • at the valve and I said to this old boy, "Garner, look here. You
  • reckon it would've ever started?" And he just hollered, laughed,
  • you know. He says, "Bill, how in the world reckon a
  • man worked as much as they have don't know no better than that?"
  • So I just set the valve like we had ours, see. We rocked it back
  • on the second kick, and away she went, you know. I says, "Oh, let's
  • see how she spread, Garner." So we give her the gas and just speeded
  • her just as fast as she'd want to run, you know, and everything. And
  • I just slowed it down and set the governors on it, I said, "Garner,
  • throw the clutch in and let's go." So he went around and throwed
  • PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL p. 2
  • the clutch in; that started it to pumpin', you see. Well, we'd see
  • 'em cornin' across there in a boat; they hollered, "Wait!" They
  • come up. Mr. Farney says, "What'd you do to it, Bill?"
  • I says, "Oh, we didn't do nothing; we just set the valve on there.
  • All it was. It's easy started. No trouble." This little pusher come in and looked at us;
  • he's a Pennsylvania Dutchman, we called him. He says, "It won't
  • run there." I says, "It is a runnin' there."
  • So he jumps around and cuts that valve off there and down she
  • went. I says, "Alright, brother, just kick on it now and see if
  • you can git it started." Well, they kicked on it; they throwed
  • the clutch out and they kicked and kicked and kicked. Until finally
  • Mr. Farney says, "Well, Les, you better let Bill have it again."
  • I's standin' off to one side from the valve and says, "Garner,
  • set that valve like we got ours set." He was ju3t as good as I
  • was; he'd learned It, you know. So he just set the valve back up
  • there where we had it, kicked it off and away it went. He was the
  • most whipped out fellow; he says, "It won't run there."
  • I says, "It is a runnin' there." And so Farney says, "Better let it alone,
  • Les." But he didn't want to give up after he was whipped out,
  • see." Boatright- Yeah.
  • I.- Yeah, boys come and ask what was the matter with 'em, and I'd
  • say just like everybody else. They try to run 'em without any air.
  • They know they got to have just so much oxygen or they don't explode.
  • So they had a fellow name of Harmon there, puttin' up a big vacuum
  • PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL p.3
  • station. He had four 80-horsepower Besamer engines and he -- that
  • man, he worked and he worked and he worked. He couldn't make 'em
  • go. So one day at noon hour we come up. Me and this old boy --
  • fellow name of Bowen, a Mississippi boy, just as rough-spoken as
  • you ever saw a fellow, but he's a good fellow. He says, "Well, I
  • bet Bill can start it." So this fellow Harmon says, "Can't start
  • it; it just won't start," I says, "Mr. Haromon, let me set the valve
  • on that and you give her the air." You know on those big engines,
  • you have to kick 'em off by air. Manpower couldn't move 'em, see.
  • We set it, I set the valve. Well, that thing -- he give it the
  • air and away it went -- pumpin', pumpin', pumpin', just as pretty
  • as any engine you ever saw. So I give her a little more, and he speeded
  • It up and run it a little bit. He says, "That won't do; it
  • won't run there. It's in them gasometers out there."
  • I says, "It is runnin', Mr. Harmon." He got around there and done
  • just like this other fellow and shut this air off. "Aright, you just
  • blow it and kick it all you want to. Hell, it ain't never gonna
  • run. I don't care what you do out there, Mr. Harmon, to them reg-
  • ulators and ometers, you can change 'em all you want to; but when
  • you make one of these engines run, you're gonna give it some air.
  • They just won't - gas just won't explode without, without you git
  • the right kind of mixture." And then he spent a whole day changin'
  • 'em around and when he got them engines to run he had to give 'em
  • air, just like we did. But he was a big shot, you know, and he
  • didn't want a little old two-bit roustabout showin' him. But we
  • PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL p.4
  • had learned it by hard experience, you know. We wasn't trying to
  • show him up. We's just trying to help the man. He didn't like it,
  • oh, Lord. But when he did git 'em to run - they had a little en-
  • gine in there with a jump-up pulley on it that run the air-jammer.
  • So one mornin' we went out there and we see 'em haulin' an old boy
  • off and we say, "What's the matter?" "That belt knocked that fellow down, got in
  • the wheel, cut a hole in where the hair there -- didn't bust his
  • skull, but he's out." I went out and looked out and says, "That's
  • just ignorance, a man gittin' hurt that way." Well, his oiler,
  • he was there, he had to take the engineer's place, he got mad
  • as the mischief, says, "Hell, like to see you put it on, it runnin'
  • like that." I says, "Porter, are you crazy? My God a mighty,
  • I can take a little old stick
  • "Well, that's what he had." "O.K., you just start your engine. You first
  • put your belt on a small pulley, you know, and you just turn
  • it up edgeways and it'll climb up on the other one, see. Then it'll
  • be tight. You got it fastened enough?" I just picked up a little
  • old stick and put it under, right under the bottom, and come up,
  • see. He says, "Bill, you're right. It was just
  • damn foolishness, that man gittin' hurt. Looked like I would of knowed
  • better, but I didn't and that fellow didn't either. He stuck
  • that stick on the inside of that belt."
  • I says, "No wonder it knocked him over. Jesus Christ, man, any-
  • body ought to know better than that." PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL
  • p.5 He says, "You're right. It was just damn ignorance.
  • He B.- Was he badly hurt?
  • I.- No, he was in the hospital -- oh, a couple of weeks, I guess,
  • not too badly hurt, you know. He never did come back on that job,
  • but he got well and went on home. He got it wound around and be-
  • fore they could git it fully stopped, why the fly wheel on this
  • engine rubbed against his head and it just rubbed it to the bone.
  • B.- Yeah I.- That belt beat him up pretty bad, you
  • know, after comin' "flop, flop, flop" -- wound around there. Wonder
  • it hadn't killed him. (BREAK)
  • I.- The first accident I ever had was on the fifth of July, I don't
  • know what year it was now, but there was just three of us workin'
  • in the gang. One fellow -- I called him Kelly, all I ever knew,
  • forgot his name, just Kelly - that's a nickname for him - he
  • stepped through the bull ropes one day when the engine was runnin'.
  • When I got where I could stop, I told him, "Now, Kelly, don't you
  • never step through them bull ropes a runnin', when this engine's
  • runnin'. You git killed that way or hurt." He said he'd stepped
  • through 'em a hundred times. I said, "Yeah, you're gonna step
  • through 'em one too many. Don't you do It when I'm runnin' this
  • engine. That's one thing I don't allow." So fourth of July come,
  • we's off. Went back on the fifth, went down, pulled a well. Got
  • all the rods back In the hole but three focals, you know, that's
  • four rods together. So I went to pull one up and went to reverse
  • PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL p.6
  • my engine and my reverse lever broke. I said, "Grab the brake, Kelly."
  • Instead of him -- he's standin' by the brake -- he just made a dive
  • through them bull ropes and as he went through, he fell and his pants'
  • leg caught what they call the dog on the bull wheel that helps to
  • throw the bull ropes on. Caught his pants' leg and carried him right
  • between the bull wheel post and the bull wheel and brought him around
  • and throwed him up through the cross of the derrick where, the, there,
  • he come down and his shoulders hit right on these bull ropes, Bounced
  • up and fell right down on the casin' head, right on the floor. Well,
  • he was out for a pretty good while. We carried him out on -- went
  • and got a little old -- some people had a tent out there, been livin'
  • out there, left an old wire cot, so we went out there and got him
  • and carried him back to the bank where this well was built, way out
  • in the water there on that Caddo Lake. They had to carry him back
  • there before they could git to him with a vehicle to take him to a
  • doctor. So the doctor and the superintendent got out there, this
  • man Rith, this superintendent, says, "Bill, how in the world did
  • you carry that man around that bull wheel and didn't kill him?"
  • Well, I says, "Mr. Rith, come in here and I'll show you," We's
  • right at another well, so I went in there and showed him, told him
  • all about it, just how it happened. He says, "Well, I couldn't imagine how that
  • thing happened. But I see now. Lot of funny things can happen
  • in an oil field, can't they?"
  • I says, "Yeah." So we went back and the doctor's examinin' him,
  • I says, "Doctor, he may have a broken collar bone; he fell right
  • PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL p.7
  • down on the rope. His ankle -- he's got a skinned elbow. He hit
  • that foot with his elbow as it was carryin' him through there. I
  • just stepped back out of the way and watched it; I couldn't do nothing
  • else." And he mashed on this fellow and he says,
  • "Ohhhhh." "Yes, you one-eyed son of a bitch, Bill told
  • you not to step through them ropes." (LAUGHTER)
  • I couldn't help but laugh; I's sorry for the fellow, but I couldn't
  • help but laugh to save my neck -- how that old boy changed up so,
  • you know. B.- Now the bull ropes were the, uh ---
  • I.- That's what you pulled these wells with, see. A bull - you had
  • a -- this rope goes from your band wheel out to your bull wheel, see.
  • And your rod line is fastened on to this wheel. Pull it up and down,
  • you reverse, you know. B.- Now is this rope like a dried belt?
  • I.- Yeah, only - acts as the same thing. B.- Yeah, it's, uh ---
  • I.- Only it's a big two-inch grass rope, you know,
  • B.- Now how big are those pulleys? I.- Oh, those pulleys were about eighteen-inch
  • pulleys. B.- And how far apart were they?
  • I.- You just have one pulley, just a straight pulley. You pull
  • through -- It's at the top of the derrick, see ---
  • B.- Now when you step through --- I.- You step through the bull ropes -- see
  • these ropes cross --- PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL
  • p.8 B.- Oh, yes.
  • I.- See, they come from one pulley to another, one wheel, from the
  • band wheel to the bull wheel, see. But they cross so you can run
  • it backwards and forwards. If it was a straight way, it wouldn't
  • do it. You couldn't pull anything. They cross right in the middle.
  • B.- Uh-huh. I.- And that leaves a space like that you
  • crawl through here, see, and why he did that I don't know. He don't
  • know hisself. He says, "I just got excited, I guess." Said this after
  • he got aright, you know. "I just got excited; I don't know what
  • made me do it." The next man I got hurt, we's pullin' rods and
  • we's usin' just a plain old hook, no latch or no nothing on it, just
  • the same thing as on a bullchain, where you haul off with it, straight
  • old hook, no swivel hook. It was swiveled, It's true, but
  • It was just a knob on it to make it swiveled,
  • B.- No latch to lock it? I.- No, no latch on it to lock it. And had
  • the elevators was what they called old tongue elevators. When you
  • pulled it up straight, it just fastened up people, and when it was
  • down on the bottom, why when you laid It down to break your rod
  • out, it just set there in the slot. We's gonna fish rods on that
  • thing, and I don't know just how many rods down now. But anyway, we
  • put on our rod tools and started back in the hole to git these
  • rods -- I think it was seven or eight focals we had on it. So this
  • boy was hookin' in; he'd just got the rod and tipped right on
  • in to this hook, see. Well, I saw it wasn't safe, so I started to
  • back down and I saw PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL
  • p.9 he's gonna grab it and I says, "Don't touch
  • that!" And before I could set it back, he grabbed it and when
  • he did he knocked it off. Just grabbed that rod and he says, "I don't
  • know why I grabbed it, nothing about it. I just got excited." He
  • dropped down there and broke his fingers up; he's crippled pretty
  • badly. But you know me hollerin' at him, tellin' him not to touch
  • it, and backin' down easy to set down to where he could hook it
  • good, you know. But he just grabbed it. But he was clean enough to
  • tell the superintendent, he says, "It was my fault, Mr. Rith. Bill
  • told me; he hollered at me and tried to git me, but I was excited
  • and just grabbed it anyway. I don't know why I grabbed it." Probably nothing
  • would've happened if he hadn't of, but minute he touched it
  • off it come and bounced and all the rods went in the hole. We had
  • to go back and pull 'em some more; go back in there and screw on and
  • pull out again. Start all over.
  • B.- Well, what about his hand? Did it get well?
  • I.- Uh, no, it got well, but it was always a crippled hand. And
  • I don't know what ever become of him. Company paid him off, some
  • little something. They wasn't no compensation or nothing then. You
  • just -- if you got hurt -- In other words, a man wasn't any more
  • than a damn mule. My old man used to say, "Well, if you kill a mule,
  • you got to buy another one. If you kill a man, you can hire another
  • one." See? That was the attitude. B.- That's what they said?
  • I.- That's right. It was just the attitude of the people.
  • B.- Well, did many people get hurt? Was the accident rate pretty high
  • PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL p.10
  • I." Yeah, lots of people, oh, Lordy. Lots of men got killed or
  • crippled up uncalled for. Through ignorance a lot of it, and through
  • unsafe equipment too, you know. Most of the accidents could be
  • avoided, but people were ignorant of the danger and they'd just
  • take chances. And your equipment wasn't safe like it is now, not
  • at all. Nowadays they've got elevators that you could drop a string
  • of tubin' and it wouldn't come off. Sane way when you hook one, why
  • it's hooked; it won't come unhooked. Them days was just plain old
  • things, you know, nothing It was hard go. And then one man as
  • an average knows about as much as another, and they all had to
  • learn it, you know. And it made it a little bit tough that way.
  • B.- Did you have -- what about fires? Weren't they pretty bad too?
  • I.- Well, no, didn't have too many fires. Mostly -- the biggest
  • fires I ever saw was caused by lightning, catchin' big tanks afire
  • that way -- hardly ever --- B.- Not many wells on fire.
  • I.- No, not much. Some few got afire, but not where I was workin'.
  • Once in awhile one would blow out and catch from the boiler but
  • not too often. They got where they'd move these boilers back quite
  • a ways from the rigs, when they'd go to bring a well in, drill it
  • in, you know. Well, they'd set these boilers back, cut the fire
  • out, if you see anything cornin' out. But before they learned that,
  • why they had quite a few fires. Used to have lots of blow-outs in
  • that Smackover Field up there. They'd strike a pocket and the mud'd
  • be too light, and strike a pocket of gas or something and just blow
  • everything out. I believe the biggest fire I ever saw was out on
  • PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL p.11
  • Pine Island. There was lots of waste oil there and lots of slews,
  • ponds, you know, water had come down and washed and this oil would
  • settle on top of this water and in dry time was very dangerous.
  • One night a fellow set a whole pond afire. It was about, I guess
  • a inch of oil, old heavy waste oil been floatin' around on it. Set
  • that afire, and my God amighty, you never saw such a fire in your
  • life. The thing was about a mile long and some places a hundred
  • yards wide, just that much oil gittln' afire at one time made a
  • terrible fire. B.- Did it burn down any equipment or anything?
  • I.- No, we lost one rig; Dixie Oil Company lost one rig was all we
  • lost. And just happened not to be any wells right close. This
  • was just -- it was right out in a big field, but it was just an old
  • pond there where water always stood. They couldn't never -- they's
  • kinda a little branch come through it there, you know, and water
  • out of the hills and waste oil. Used to waste an awful lot of oil
  • in that Pine Island district there, where they couldn't git it
  • treated right and they'd put it off and it'd go down and settle in
  • them swamps. Made it pretty rough. B.- Probably killed a lot of fish.
  • I.- I believe it was in 1917 or 1918 when they had the epidemic of
  • flu there. Gulf had a camp there on Pine Island. Had over 100 men
  • in that camp; in a week's time there wasn't nobody there. They's
  • just sick, some of 'em died and scattered out. We had a camp of
  • about twenty-four men, with the Dixie Oil Company - I think there's
  • twenty-four of us stayed there. It wasn't a quarter of a mile from
  • PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL p.12
  • it and never did we have a man with it, the flu. I don't know why,
  • but It just struck that way. B.- You did all your work then practically,
  • with two companies? I.- Yessir, I worked -- well, I never worked
  • for any other company since I been here in 1919. During that time
  • I got hurt one time and I told the superintendent, I says, "Mr.
  • Thornberry, that ain't safe."
  • Oh, he says, "Bill, that bailer and things ain't as heavy as that
  • machine." I says, "I know it, but something might happen.
  • Give her a quick jerk or something. That thing ought to be
  • anchored down. It's just B.- Was that the draw works or ---
  • I.- Uh-huh, had the draw works set -- what they called the pullin'
  • machine draw works - had it set down on two eight by tens. And
  • that's all there was, wasn't anchored down either end -- just bailin'
  • shallow wells, about 1800 feet well. Well, I'd been bailin' there
  • for about an hour, I guess, and was goin' back In the hole, and what
  • hung the bailer up, nobody knows, nor I don't know if what it was
  • was a pocket of gas puffed up there stoppin' it. But it stopped
  • and all at once it went through, you see, and they checked that
  • thing up and it come down across that foot. I was standin' on this
  • eight by ten and this beam, this runner, rather, and that come right
  • on across that foot. I had on one of these safety-toed shoes, see.
  • Well, it just twisted my foot, just right around there and broke
  • them two bones right there. That's the only 'sides this finger
  • gittin' mashed, that's the only injury I've ever had.
  • PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL p.13
  • B.- Only accident you've had. I.- Only one I've had in my thirty-six years
  • of service in the field. I guess I'm pretty lucky; I contribute it
  • to luck more than anything else. But I never got very many men hurt.
  • I just tried to play it safe.
  • B.- Did you know many of the landowners around the fields you
  • worked on? I.- Oh, yeah, I knew most all of 'em here,
  • got acquainted with all of 'em, Most of 'em were very nice. We had
  • one man that was -- he lived over here close to Necessity - he's
  • the most peculiar character you ever saw. He leased the Gulf his land; then he turned
  • around and leased it to somebody else, see. They had a big law-
  • suit about it. So it was settled over here in Eastland County,
  • and the old man was about to go to the penitentiary. So Mr, Pyron
  • called me up one morning and says, "Bill, go over there and tell
  • old man Harris I want him and his wife in Eastland at 1:00 today.
  • I'm gonna wait till you come back here and call me." He was in
  • Port Worth and I's out there, see. He used the company phone.
  • So I went over there, and I says, "Mr. Harris," -- met him cornin'
  • out of the house -- "Mr, Pyron said to tell you he wanted you and
  • your wife to go to Eastland today, to be in Eastland by 1:00."
  • "Well," he says, "I've got a cow that I think got a young calf
  • and I got to go see about her." I said, "Mr, Harris, is that cow worth as
  • much to you as that law- suit is?"
  • "By God, I'll be there. By God, I'll be there." That was the
  • PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL p. 14
  • attitude he'd take. "You go back and tell him I'll be there."
  • I says, "Mr. Harris, if you don't have a way to go, why I'll take
  • you and it won't cost you nothing." "No, I'll go." And if it hadn't been for Mr.
  • Pyron, the man would've got taken, but he got it settled.
  • B.- How'd he settle it? I.- I don't know just how. They compromised
  • some way or other. These other folks saw that they were wrong, you
  • see; they got it settled some way or another, keep the old man from
  • goin' to the penitentiary. He's got lots of land and has got It leased
  • out now and got some good wells on it now. But Law, he's the most,
  • contrariest man I ever saw In my life. One night we's sittin'
  • up at the Island, right at this well, this camp we had here. We had
  • one well makin' 3,000 barrels a day and we had to keep the pump
  • runnin' pretty near all the time, see, to take care of this oil, git
  • the tank full. So somebody had drilled a well down on this man's
  • Harris's lease down there and he says, "Bill, let's walk down;
  • I've got to put a tank on down here. Just walk down there with me."
  • We just walked down there; I'd holdin' his flashlight for him,
  • to read his gauge line. Old man Harris come up with a shotgun and
  • says, "By God, you're not gonna run that oil!" So this fellow says,
  • "Look here, old man, by God, one eighth of this oil is yours and the
  • balance of it belongs to the Gulf Oil Corporation. I'm gonna run
  • it. I'll come down there and make you chew the sights off that
  • God damned gun." (LAUGHTER)
  • No sir, I's just fixin' to dive off. Afraid that old man -- but
  • PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL p. 15
  • he backed down. I've never seen a fellow back down, and he had that
  • shotgun drawed right on that fellow. Fellow just backed him right
  • down. He said, "Now you come up here and you see the gauge." Had
  • the old man come up and sign the gauge ticket, you know, so you
  • could have a royalty gauger, you know, as a landowner. So he sent
  • his brother out next day as a royalty gauger. His brother had to
  • see every tank that was put on. So that was the funniest thing to
  • me. The old man, his brother come out and he says, "I want witnesses
  • I want to see what happened." This fellow by the name of Stanford, he says,
  • "Mr, Harris, you see that?"
  • "Yeah." He says, "Sign your name."
  • He says, "I can't write." He says, "By God, you can draw an 'X'!"
  • Sent a man out there didn't know one figure from another, one letter
  • from another, to be a gauger, B.- That was his brother-in-law?
  • I.- No, it was his brother, B.- He couldn't write?
  • I.- Couldn't write; couldn't sign his name, B.- Couldn't read a gauge, could he?
  • I.- No, not a thing, he didn't know whether it was one foot, ten
  • foot or what, I tell you, you just can't imagine the char ---
  • B.- How much land did Mr, Harris have? Was he pretty well off?
  • I.- Yeah, he had lots of land. PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL
  • p.16 B.- He was a rancher, I guess.
  • I.- Yeah, kind of a - well, the oil company made him rich. He had
  • a few cattle, not many. He raised a nice family, but he was the
  • most contrary, even with his neighbors and all that I ever saw. I
  • liked his children. His oldest boy was just as nice a kid as you
  • ever want to meet in your life, and I moved out of that district up
  • in here, and I haven't seen his boy for twenty years. I been down
  • around here but I hadn't seen him. So I went down to a funeral;
  • a man's son that worked for the company died and they burled him
  • over there. So I went over there, and this old man Harris, he al-
  • ways liked me, git along pretty good. I don't know why, but he
  • just treated me pretty good. He said, "Bill, you wouldn't know
  • Claude. You remember him?" I says, "Yeah, never would forget that boy,
  • Mr. Harris. That was a nice kid."
  • "Well, he'll be here directly. He made a preacher. You won't
  • know him now; he's a great big fellow." Directly that boy drove up and he just run
  • over and "Hello, Mr. Ingram." He'd remembered me, you know. And
  • he's a real - he's pastor of some church over here in Mineral
  • Wells now, nice fellow. But that old man ---
  • B.- He took care of his money though, I.- Yeah.
  • B.- Well, what did the -- what's your Impression of the way the
  • landowners came out? Did they spend all their money?
  • I.- Yeah, most of 'em did. Most of 'em did. Some few saved their
  • PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL p.17
  • money. Uh, old fellow by the name of Yose over there -- company
  • had his land leased, and the railroad track come through this land,
  • see; and the company wanted to build a camp site on this land over
  • there. They could've built it anyway, but they come out there; the
  • land man come out there. And they had me in the crew to come over
  • there, bring a crew over there. I said, "Now, Mr. Yose, we want to
  • build a camp site here next to the railroad on your property here.
  • But we'll build it here between four locations, where it won't
  • interfere with your drillin'. If your land proves up good, why
  • it won't interfere with your wells at all. Now what will you
  • charge us for it?" Well, he says, "The old lady says she wants
  • $1000 an acre." We say, "Mr. -- my Lord, what's the matter
  • with you? We don't want to buy this stuff; just want to lease
  • it and turn it back to you when we git through with it. We couldn't
  • consider nothing like that."
  • "Well, old lady said she wanted $40,000 for forty acres. We'd
  • consider $500 an acre for it." "No, Mr. Yose, we can build one right over
  • here on this track for nothing. We can build our railroad track
  • out to it if we want it.!l That old man turned down $20,000
  • right there. Well, they drilled a well down in one corner of
  • his well, and that well when they shot it -- they shot it with about
  • 350 quarts of nitro- glycerin -- it made just a showin' of oil.
  • And water and stuff that was in the well, it was one foot, three
  • production in a 500 barrel tank, you see, which is a little over
  • thirty barrels. PIONEERS IN TEXAS OIL
  • p. 18 That's every drop of stuff they ever did -- oh,
  • just had to dump it out, see. You couldn't git that little bit
  • of oil out of a tank. I just thought how -- old man was old and
  • his old lady -- why, he turned down that, when it wasn't a hurtin'
  • a thing in the world, see. You just -- it's what I say - you just
  • meet the most peculiar characters in an oil field you ever saw. Why,
  • right here in this little town when I first come here, went to
  • church right up here, little church up there. Well, they passed
  • the hat around; we fellows all just chipped in; we's used to
  • it, you know, give 'em a little money. Well, that fellow got up there
  • and preached and he called us whore mongers; he called us everything
  • in the world. And we just got up and walked out, people
  • that worked in the oil field were thieves, whore mongers and everything
  • else. Now he just ruined hisself, his church, and everything
  • else, see, Well, all the people that works in oil fields ain't
  • that kind of a character, you know. But that was his conception
  • of people that worked in a oil field. He thought they were
  • all murderers and everything else. It's a great life if you
  • don't weaken. (LAUGHTER) B.- (LAUGHTER)