|
July 2002
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Houston Branch
Houston
in 1900 Part 2. Houston and the Texas Oil Industry
The last issue of Houston Business
looked at the forces that shaped the Houston economy
of 1900, primarily lumber and cotton. Although lumber and
cotton remained powerful forces in 1900, the economic momentum
brought by the completion of the rail system in Texas and
exploitation of the Blackland Prairie and East Texas timber
was rapidly coming to an end. Houston would need new sources
of growth in the 20th century if it were to continue to flourish.
Houston’s spur to growth in the new
century would come from two seemingly random acts of nature.
In September 1900 a great hurricane destroyed Galveston, effectively
ending the Houston–Galveston rivalry and clarifying
the value of a ship channel and an inland port on the Texas
Gulf Coast. Then in January 1901, the Spindletop gusher near
Beaumont came in, producing unexpected riches and kicking
off a frenzied search for oil in Gulf Coast salt domes. Houston
would capitalize on these short-term riches with nearby oil
fields, but more important, it would secure a long-term future
in oil by making itself the focal point of a new Texas oil
industry.[1]
This article examines the oil industry’s
early development and its shift from Spindletop and Beaumont
to Houston. A future article will look at the 19th century
rivalry between Houston and Galveston, the importance of the
1900 hurricane and its effect on Houston’s economic development
in the 20th century.
Oil in Texas
Significant oil deposits had been
discovered in Texas long before Spindletop. Spanish explorers
had used asphalt from Sabine Pass to repair the bottom of
their ships in 1543, and seeps of tar, asphalt and petroleum
had been documented in 18 Texas counties by 1874.[2] Many
of these 19th century sightings were in East Texas, at locations
such as Oil Springs in Nacogdoches County, Sour Lake and Saratoga
in Hardin County, along White Oak Bayou in Harris County and
in the vicinity of Spindletop in Jefferson County.
A merchant named L. T. Barrett and his
three partners drilled the state’s first successful oil well
in 1866 at Oil Springs.[3] Completed at 110 feet, the well
produced 10 barrels of oil per day, but further drilling in
the area failed. During the 1880s, however, success by subsequent
drillers turned Oil Springs into the state’s first active
oil field, with a primitive refinery and oil gathering lines.
Oil drilling was typically done using deepwater- drilling
cable rigs, all that was available in East Texas during this
era. These primitive rigs were often an important cause of
failure.
The most significant oil development
in Texas before Spindletop began in Corsicana in 1894. Although
oil seepages had been noted in the area, the Corsicana field
was discovered by water drillers seeking a deep artesian well.
Like the rest of the Blackland Prairie, Corsicana was suffering
through the prolonged agricultural depression of the 1890s,
and industrial water supplies would offer Corsicana an opportunity
to diversify away from cotton. Once the oil was found, a group
of local businessmen organized an oil development company
and bought leases in the vicinity of the discovery. They brought
in two experienced Pennsylvania drillers, James M. Guffey
and John H. Galey, to test the field in exchange for a half
interest in the production. Four of the first five wells were
productive, and a significant oil boom was soon under way.
Production rose quickly from 65,975
barrels in 1897 to 836,000 barrels by 1900, or just over 1
percent of the U.S. total.[4] Because the development of the
field was wasteful and chaotic, and because of problems marketing
the Texas oil, the mayor of Corsicana invited an experienced
oilman to inspect the field and suggest operational improvements.
Joseph S. Cullinan, who had gained experience in all phases
of oil development and marketing as an employee and manager
for Standard Oil, recognized opportunity in Texas and immediately
struck out with his own company in the Corsicana fields. He
signed longterm contracts with producers, organized the gathering
of oil from the fields, built storage facilities and constructed
the first significant refinery in the state.
Although Spindletop and other Gulf Coast
salt dome discoveries would soon dwarf Corsicana oil, it had
a lasting effect on Texas oil history. First, Corsicana brought
together many of the key actors at Spindletop.[5] Guffey and
Galey, for example, would finance the successful drilling
at Spindletop and, with further funding from the Mellons of
Pittsburgh, would found Gulf Oil Co. Cullinan—often recognized
as the father of Texas oil—would come to Spindletop to rationalize
production, storage and marketing, much as he had done at
Corsicana. He would found the Texas Co. and build it into
a major oil power, later known as Texaco.
Though oil drew a number of capable
Texans to both Corsicana and Spindletop, Corsicana also set
an early pattern of acquiring skilled labor and oil field
equipment from established oil-producing regions in Ohio and
Pennsylvania. Capital also typically came from non-Texas sources.
Just as the Mellons financed Gulf Oil, the Pew family of Philadelphia
became a major influence at Spindletop and later Texas fields,
using Sun Oil Co. as a vehicle.
A second important factor at Corsicana
was the use of rotary drilling. Introduced in the Dakota Territory
in 1882, this drilling method was extremely successful in
the shallow Corsicana sands, cutting drilling costs per foot
by two-thirds or more compared with those typically experienced
in the Pennsylvania oil fields.[6] Walter B. Sharp originated
the method of using fluid mud to plaster and hold up soft
formations. Penetration of the Spindletop salt dome was finally
accomplished with a rotary rig moved from Corsicana and operated
by former Sharp employees. Rotary drilling innovations would
become an important building block for Houston’s oil-machinery
industry.
The Spindletop area, with its low hills,
was unlike any known oil-bearing geologic structure in 1900.
Reports from both the U.S. Geological Service and from state
geologists had warned investors of no known scientific basis
for oil to be discovered at Spindletop. But once the salt
dome was penetrated, what happened at Spindletop made history.
There had been previous gushers, but after an eruption of
mud and water, this one catapulted the drill pipe over the
top of the derrick. It unleashed a stream of oil twice the
height of the derrick that ran uncontrolled for nine days.
Successful wells at Corsicana produced 20–40 barrels
per day; Spindletop production was 75,000–100,000 barrels
per day!
The Spindletop phenomenon riveted the
attention of every geologist and potential oil investor in
the United States. Trains arrived bearing tourists curious
to see the gusher. Leasing activity was frenzied, and Beaumont
became the greatest of all oil boomtowns. (Houston even briefly
billed itself as the "Gateway to Beaumont.") However,
by spring of 1902 some of the Spindletop wells ceased to flow
due to wasteful production practices, and soon most were producing
more saltwater than oil. This led to a major fallout of producers
who had signed long-term contracts, and exploration efforts
shifted to other area salt domes. Cullinan and the Texas Co.,
with Sharp heading the exploration arm, quickly found success
at Sour Lake in March 1902. Other Hardin County domes at Saratoga
and Batson produced gushers within a year. Exploration then
moved on to Humble (1905) and Goose Creek (1908) in Harris
County.
A pattern quickly developed: discovery
of a salt dome gusher, rapid and wasteful exploitation, production
decline, then movement to the next salt dome. Olien and Olien
described the process as "a cluster of familiar faces
in a string of new locations." [7]

The Oil Industry and Houston
The Texas oil industry kept a significant
presence in Beaumont through much of the first 10 years of
the 20th century. However, by decade’s end the administration
and management of Texas oil, as well as much of its equipment-manufacturing
capacity, had shifted to Houston. Beaumont became primarily
a regional refining area, distilling crude oil that arrived
by pipeline from other parts of Texas, Oklahoma and Louisiana.
The growth of an industrial oil infrastructure in Texas, and
its consolidation in Houston, would continue steadily through
the early decades of the century.
The most immediate impact of the Spindletop
discovery was cheap fuel for local industry. Cullinan, as
part of his marketing efforts at Corsicana, had worked with
the Cotton Belt Railroad [8] to develop an oilburning mechanism
for locomotives. The first successful run of a Cotton Belt
passenger train powered by oil had been from Corsicana to
Hillsboro in 1898. Texas railroads now quickly converted from
wood or coal to oil, as did street electric railways, breweries,
brickyards, ice factories and cottonseed mills. The first
pipeline to Houston ended at oil storage facilities located
at the intersection of tracks for the Houston East and West
Texas Railway and the International–Great Northern Railroad.
Cheap energy cut costs, boosted profits and made the region
more competitive.
In 1905, the Texas Co. still operated
from Beaumont, but Cullinan wrote to a colleague in New York
that "the time will come—perhaps at no distant day—when
we want our general office in Houston instead of Beaumont,
as Houston seems to me to be the coming center of the oil
business in the Southwest." [9] The Texas Co. did, in
fact, move to Houston in 1908, followed by Gulf Oil in 1916
and regional Shell offices in 1933. 3 The most significant
production company to come out of Houston itself began when
Ross S. Sterling organized his various oil holdings into Humble
Oil Co. in 1911 and moved the offices to Houston the following
year. To attract volume purchase terms for his crude oil,
Sterling needed to be a bigger producer, and he invited a
number of other producers (almost all with roots at Spindletop)
to join in a combined company. William S. Farish, Robert L.
Blaffer, Walter W. Fondren and Harry C. Wiess of Beaumont
were among the group that combined their assets into the new
Humble Oil and Refining Co. in 1917. Standard Oil Co. of New
Jersey bought a controlling interest in 1919 but left management
largely in Texas hands for many years. The company today is
Exxon Mobil Corp.
Although machine shops in both Houston
and Beaumont quickly learned to handle oil field repairs,
the growth of the oil machinery industry was slow. A highly
developed rail network and good water transportation made
shipment of tubular goods and refining equipment relatively
easy, and established producing regions such as Ohio, Pennsylvania
and West Virginia initially supplied most of this equipment.[10]
One important early path to the development of a Texas oil
machinery industry was the innovative development and use
of the rotary rig by locals. In Beaumont, Parker Well Works
was an early provider of rotary rig parts, using the manufacturing
facilities of Southern Car Manufacturing Supply Co. But the
real innovation in the industry was the product of partners
Walter Sharp and Howard R. Hughes, Sr.
Sharp and Hughes had twice given up
on promising wildcats—at Goose Creek and Pierce Junction—because
of their inability to drill through hard rock formations with
the technology of the day. Existing fishtail bits wore out
quickly and had to be replaced often, and they tended to produce
a hole that tapered to a narrower gauge at greater depth.
With his partner’s permission, Hughes took a vacation to concentrate
on the problem and arrived at a solution in just two weeks.
Hughes’ famous design for a rock bit consisted of cone-shaped
revolving cutters with teeth that exercised a chipping or
crushing action on the rock under the weight of heavy steel
pipe. The new bit drilled a true hole with 10 times the speed
of any existing bit.[11] The Hughes bit is still in use around
the world today.
Sharp-Hughes Tool Co. was formed in
1908 to manufacture the bit in Houston, and in 1910, when
more capital was needed, the seemingly ever-present Joseph
Cullinan joined them as a partner. Upon Sharp’s death in 1912,
Hughes assumed control of the company and later incorporated
it as Hughes Tool Co. In 1917, a competing version of the
rock bit emerged when Clarence E. Reed opened a plant in Houston
to produce the Reed roller bit and reamer.
Other early oil field machinery examples
in Houston can be cited.[12] James Abercrombie, a drilling
supervisor, invented a device to prevent high-pressure blowouts
due to high gas pressure; Harry Cameron revamped his machine
shop to produce the preventer, opening Cameron Iron Works
in 1922. In 1917, Howard Smith Co. began the manufacture of
pipe fittings and other supplies for Texas oil fields, and
W-K-M Manufacturing opened in 1920 to produce rotary slips
and pipeline valves. By 1920, Houston was home to the state’s
most important concentration of oil field machinery companies.
Refineries also came to the Houston
Ship Channel. The Spindletop legacy for the Beaumont area
dwindled to three large refineries: the Gulf Oil and Texas
Co. plants at Port Arthur and the Magnolia Oil plant at Beaumont.
It was Joseph Cullinan who established the criteria for a
good refinery location in Texas: large acreage, plenty of
fresh water, deepwater shipping, and protection from storms
and floods. Having witnessed the 1900 hurricane and another
great storm in 1907, Cullinan felt that both Galveston and
Texas City failed the fourth requirement, leaving only Beaumont–Port
Arthur and the Houston Ship Channel as viable alternatives.
Among the early refineries in Houston
were Galena–Signal (1916), Sinclair (1918), Deep Water
Refining (1919) and Humble Oil and Refining (1920). By 1930,
eight refineries were operating on the Houston Ship Channel,
running 194,000 barrels of crude per day.[13] Despite Cullinan’s
reservations, Texas City had four refineries by 1939.
Simply dating the movement into Houston
of major oil companies, such as the Texas Co. or Gulf Oil,
or the birth of new firms in the city, such as Sharp-Hughes
Tool, places the formative years for the city’s oil industry
in the 1908–16 period. The key moment in creating Houston’s
oil industry probably came earlier, however, in 1904–05,
when several of the most influential circles in the Texas
oil industry converged on the city.[14] Active exploration
of the Humble oil field, just north of Houston, was under
way throughout 1904, and the first significant completion
of an oil well was in January 1905, pulling many of the Spindletop
pioneers within Houston’s sphere of influence. Blaffer, Farish
and Fondren were all working in Houston by this time.
While Cullinan was contemplating the
future move of Texas Co. offices to Houston from Beaumont
in 1905, he had already moved himself and his family there
from Corsicana; James Autry, Texas Co.’s chief lawyer, moved
to Houston from Beaumont the same year. Former Gov. James
Hogg, a major political power in oil and a member of Texas
Co.’s board of directors, took a suite at the Rice Hotel and
moved his Austin office to Houston. Both Walter Sharp and
Howard Hughes relocated their families to Houston in 1904.
Olien and Olien describe the many "business
circles" in the early days of Texas oil and the need
to be a part of these circles to survive.
[T]hose who settled into stable business
circles…or combined their holdings, tended to endure in
the high-risk industry, functioning as promotors in some
industries and investors in others….The lone wolves at Spindletop
who did not work within circles rarely survived the decade
as significant players…[as] they failed to spread the high
risks of exploration and production over enough ventures.[15]
The circles that coalesced in Houston
were more than survivors; they were among the most successful
and astute in the industry. The nexus of knowledge and power
in Texas oil had moved to Houston by 1904–05, and it
continued to grow thereafter. Perhaps Houston’s initial attraction
(as compared with Corsicana’s or Beaumont’s) to oilmen such
as Cullinan, Farish and Sharp was its advantages as a regional
capital: superior communications, transportation and infrastructure.
These were the same factors that had made Houston the center
of the state’s lumber industry 20 years earlier, when most
of the logs were being cut in Beaumont.
But the earliest signal of a permanent
presence for oil in Houston, the sign that it would be more
than another in a string of stops for familiar faces, was
the arrival of these key actors and their families. To be
connected to this knowledge loop was absolutely crucial in
a volatile and risky industry, and many others would follow
these influential pioneers into the city.
Such clustering of economic activity,
if successful, builds its own momentum whether the industry
is oil, financial services, autos or software. The larger
the cluster, the more specialized the knowledge and skills
inside it, making it more attractive to those outside and,
finally, making the cluster even bigger as it attracts more
participants. This circular and cumulative process has brought
oil-driven growth to Houston—both upstream and downstream—for
over a century.
 |
| Notes
- For another look at this important moment
in Houston’s history, see Harold L. Platt, "Houston
at the Crossroads: The Emergence of the Urban
Center of the Southwest," Journal of
the West 18 (July), 1979, pp. 51–61.
- C. A. Warner, Texas Oil and Gas Since
1543 (Houston: Gulf Publishing Co., 1939).
- W. T. Block, "Oil Industry in East Texas
Traces Roots Back to 1860s," www.wtblock.com/wtblockjr/oil5.htm
(first published in the Beaumont Enterprise,
January 8, 2000).
- John O. King, "The Early Texas Oil Industry:
Beginnings at Corsicana, 1894– 1901,"
The Journal of Southern History 32
(November), 1966, pp. 506–07
- For a longer discussion of the business circles
that developed at both Corsicana and Beaumont,
see Diana Davids Olien and Roger M. Olien,
Oil in Texas: The Gusher Age, 1895–1945
(Austin: University of Texas Press, 2002), pp.
47–50.
- King, p. 507.
- Olien and Olien, p. 43.
- Officially known as the St. Louis and Southwestern
Railway.
- John O. King, Joseph Stephen Cullinan:
A Study of Leadership in the Texas Petroleum
Industry, 1897–1937 (Nashville: Vanderbilt
University Press for the Texas Gulf Coast Historical
Association, 1970), p. 182.
- Olien and Olien (p. 59) cite the example of
Oil Well Supply Co., which manufactured its
products in Pittsburgh and marketed them through
outlets in Beaumont, Corsicana and Humble.
- R. C. Gano, "Howard Robard Hughes, Sr."
in The Handbook of Texas Online (Austin:
Texas State Historical Association, 2002), www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online.
- The examples are from David G. McComb, Houston:
A History (Austin: University of Texas
Press, 1981), pp. 80–81, and Olien and
Olien, pp. 59–62.
- McComb, p. 80.
- The timing of these personal and family moves
into the city is noted in Marguerite Johnson,
Houston: The Unknown City (1836–1946)
(College Station: Texas A&M University Press,
1991), pp. 126–27.
- Olien and Olien, p. 64. 5
|
 |
|
Houston
Beige Book
July 2002
It has been a long year for Houston
and for Texas. It doesn’t matter whether you compute rates
over the past three months, six months or the whole year,
job growth in Houston and other major Texas cities has been
consistently close to zero.
The latest news on Houston remains mixed.
Upstream improvements in drilling were put on hold by uncertainty
over energy prices, but downstream chemicals have seen recent
gains in sales and profits. The Houston Purchasing Managers
Index is pointing to local expansion for the second consecutive
month, but retail sales remain sluggish. Existing home sales
in June held up at last year’s levels, while new home sales
were off by 5 percent. By the end of the year, the ongoing
U.S. recovery and a falling dollar should have most local
indicators pointing upward again.
Retail and Auto Sales
Retail sales remain slow in Houston,
running 1 or 2 percent behind last year’s. Because retailers
were not aggressive in stocking up, they’ve had few inventory
problems as a result of sluggish business.
Auto sales, in contrast, were up a striking
26 percent, but the increase is partly attributed to sales
lost last year during Tropical Storm Allison. Year-to-date
sales are off only 3 percent compared with the same period
in 2001.
Energy Prices
Crude oil prices have stayed in
a narrow range since late May, weakening briefly from $26
to $24 per barrel, then returning to $26. Only the usual news
seemed to move the market: OPEC, Iraq and an occasional refinery
glitch. Inventories remained high but were unchanged in recent
weeks.
Gasoline demand is up only about 1 percent
this summer, and inventories filled early in the driving season.
Inventories and retail price have remained very stable in
recent weeks. Refiners improved profit margins from the dismal
levels of the first quarter but were forced to reduce production
runs to control inventory.
Oil and Gas Machinery
After a turnaround in April and
a 16 percent rise over the following seven weeks, the U.S.
rig count flattened in June and early July. The number of
working rigs has fallen from 859 on May 24 to only 840 currently.
International drilling, which never experienced the deep downturn
seen in the United States, has now been flat for several months.
Drilling and oil machinery suppliers say that sales have also
flattened and that pricing remains weak, with substantial
excess capacity.
The recent drilling slowdown is attributable
to uncertainty about the course of natural gas prices. Gas
prices weakened amid signs that inventories were headed for
record levels this summer, barring unusually hot weather that
could drain stocks. Inventories are currently 19 percent above
the five-year average level for this time of year.
Petrochemicals
Basic petrochemicals experienced
strong demand in recent weeks, with prices rising sharply
for ethylene, propylene and styrene. Profits improved sharply,
with higher product prices plus feedstock prices that were
stable to falling. Plastic producers also pushed through a
series of price increases for polyethylene, polypropylene,
polystyrene and PVC. Fundamentals have not increased this
much for all segments of the industry, and high levels of
plant outages over the summer may have created a tightness
for important products such as ethylene that cannot be sustained
into this fall.
Housing Markets
Houston housing took different
directions in June, with existing home sales matching those
of June 2001, while new home sales were off about 5 percent.
Low interest rates and a flight of funds from the stock market
seemed to be keeping local housing markets strong despite
slow job growth. The improvement in existing home sales has
to be viewed with caution, as the coverage of homes under
the multiple listing service has expanded recently to include
some new homes and nonbroker listings offered for a fee.
| About Houston
Business
For more information or
copies of this publication, contact Bill Gilmer
at (713) 652-1546 or bill.gilmer@dal.frb.org,
or write to Bill Gilmer, Houston Branch, Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas, P.O. Box 2578, Houston,
Texas 77252. This publication is available on
the Internet at www.dallasfed.org.
The views expressed are
those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect
the positions of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
or the Federal Reserve System. |
|
|