Oil City Land Service

Oil City Land Service ***Your Full-Service Resource in the Oil Patch. *** We are the ones who figure out who holds title t

…and the rest is history!
12/03/2021

…and the rest is history!

This a remarkable historical photo. The cars seen clogging this road belong to a crowd of some 8-10 thousand people gathered at the Daisy Bradford # 3 oil derrick just south of Overton in early October, 1930 after word got out that oil might be discovered there. Mind you, it was a time when the Great Depression was on and people were desperate.Locals rented parking for 25 cents a car and vendors sold food, soft drinks, and local corn liquor. The first day passed and the bailing operation continued for a second day, removing all the mud from the hole, yet still no oil. The crew started swabbing the well on the third day and some black fluid was beginning to show. After countless trips, a gurgling sound could be heard by the crowd. Finally, on October 3, 1930, oil spirted from the casing and over the crown block, and those gathered there also gave vent to their emotions with a loud cheer. They didn't realize it immediately but by early spring of 1931, it became evident that the new wells in the area were not from small, widely spaced pockets of oil in separate fields, but from one vast field stretching for dozens of miles. It was learned that all the new wells were drawing oil from the same Woodbine sands. The great East Texas oilfield, one of the largest ever discovered, was born. So far more than 5 billion barrels of oil have been pumped out of the ground. How important is this site? A historical marker was erected there by the State of Texas and the well is still, to this day, producing. You can see the pumpjack in this 2008 Google Streetview:
https://www.google.com/maps/@32.1952154,-94.9142397,3a,75y,291.61h,91.55t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1sqJwY4AXXSlrQbXI6I5o8Dw!2e0!7i3328!8i1664

Luling’s first geothermal HVAC system. Cool! 🤣😁
03/20/2021

Luling’s first geothermal HVAC system. Cool! 🤣😁

After months of renovations, the Luling Oil Museum reopened its doors on March 15. The museum will continue to celebrate the rich and unique history of the Luling oil fields but will do so with a strong hold on its future.

03/02/2021
10/23/2020
Fracking is environmentally responsible??  Yep.
10/17/2020

Fracking is environmentally responsible?? Yep.

Chances are you've heard of fracking, but here's something you might not know: fracking helps us produce affordable energy while minimizing our environmental...

Dry Hole Byrd. What a story!
10/16/2020

Dry Hole Byrd. What a story!

I posted this photo once before but since then I have learned the backstory and it's just so, so good.

This photo comes from a 1941 article in Life magazine about Texas Longhorn football. At that time, UT had the #1 team in the nation. When I posted this before I just said "UT fans at a football game, 1941" or some such.

The man pictured here is D. Harold "Dry Hole" Byrd and his is the ultimate rags-to-riches story.

The independent petroleum got his nickname because he set the dubious record of drilling 56 consecutive dry holes. But Byrd's fortunes soon changed.

The down-on-his-luck, Longview-based wildcatter made his fortune in the 1930s East Texas Oil Boom. He became a millionaire philanthropist who:

-co-founded the Civil Air Patrol.
-helped create what became LTV Corporation.
-owned the Texas School Book Depository at the time Lee Harvey Oswald allegedly killed President John Kennedy from its sixth-floor window.
-had an Antarctica mountain range named for him by his famed explorer cousin, Admiral Richard Byrd.
-shared his wealth with the University of Texas Longhorn Band, buying the biggest bass drum in the world and giving "Big Bertha" to the organization.

Byrd had studied geology at UT and gotten into the oil business. In the fall of 1930 he loaned wildcatter "Dad" Joiner machinery for a Rusk County well called the Daisy Bradford No. 3. It turned out to be the discovery well for the world's largest oil field.

The 30-year-old Byrd set up shop in Longview's Gregg Hotel (later bought by a fellow named Conrad Hilton). He then secretly bought out the Gregg Abstract Co. and opened an office on the Gregg County Courthouse lawn.

Byrd hired 72 typists from Dallas, one for each volume of county abstracts Byrd was interested in. The wonderful book The Last Boom by James A. Clark and Michel T. Halbouty, explains that:

"As soon as the courthouse opened in the morning, the girls would rush into the county clerk's office and each would get the volume to which she had been assigned. This gave Byrd first claim on the books. When Byrd found acreage he wanted, he could have it checked out by evening and he was able to pay the lease seller immediately."

"As soon as the courthouse opened in the morning, the girls would rush into the county clerk's office and each would get the volume to which she had been assigned. This gave Byrd the first claim on the books. When Byrd found acreage he wanted, he could have it checked out by evening and he was able to pay the lease seller immediately."

He eventually moved to Dallas and used his oil profits to build a financial empire, founding several oil and gas companies (one later bought by Mobil) and delving into real estate and manufacturing.

Always interested in aviation, Byrd helped organize Ling-Temco-Vought (later known as LTV) and invested in his relative's exploration of the North and South poles. In gratitude, Admiral Byrd named an Antarctic range the Harold Byrd Mountains.

Just before World War II began, Byrd and several others founded the Civil Air Patrol. The organization evolved into the official Air Force Auxiliary which does inland search and rescue missions.

In 1939 Byrd bought a Dallas building on Elm Street that came to be called the Texas School Book Depository. The story goes that several weeks after JFK's 1963 death, Byrd had the sixth-floor sniper's window removed and placed on display in his house. The window since has been returned to what today is the Sixth Floor Museum in the infamous downtown building.

The larger-than-life Byrd, who called himself a "free enterpriser", died in 1986 at age 86. Each year the D. Harold Byrd Memorial Scholarship is presented to a Longhorn Band member.

All of this information comes from this link at Stephen F. Austin University's fine Center for Regional Heritage website, here:

http://www.sfasu.edu/heritagecenter/9353.asp

I was reading contemplating all of this. Think about it:

1) These folks were on the eve of World War II and didn't know it. This article was published in the November 17, 1941 issue ----- three weeks before Pearl Harbor. The young man behind Mr. Byrd looks like he's of prime military draft age.

2) I wonder what "Dry Hole Byrd" would have said had you told him that one day he would own one of the most infamous building in history, and why it was so infamous. It's just kind of crazy to think how, 23 years later, he'd become known for something so infamous. Strange, how the river of a man's life ebbs and flows.

First producing oil well in Texas:  1866.  Have you ever found an oil lease or mineral severance prior to 1900 in your t...
09/12/2020

First producing oil well in Texas: 1866. Have you ever found an oil lease or mineral severance prior to 1900 in your title work? 🙄

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07/20/2020

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Oil major Chevron said on Monday it agreed to buy Noble Energy in an all-stock deal, valuing the Houston-based oil and gas producer at $5 billion.

07/16/2020

Interesting to see all the products that can be made from just one barrel of .

Credit : Allen Gilmer

Are you a  ?  We can help with title due diligence to ensure you're looking at a cloud-free deal!  Message us today for ...
06/27/2020

Are you a ? We can help with title due diligence to ensure you're looking at a cloud-free deal! Message us today for more info. 😉

Luling is one of our home bases!  It’s got a rich history for sure.
06/24/2020

Luling is one of our home bases! It’s got a rich history for sure.

..and the rest is history!
06/09/2020

..and the rest is history!

05/07/2020

This fella has been visiting Texas courthouses. Be sure to give him a follow, as we’ve got some beautiful ones!

Road trips!

04/20/2020

It's a frightening time in the oil patch, especially today, when the unthinkable occurred: WTI price slammed into the negative, at one point reaching -$37.36, and finally closing at -$13.10. We are in uncharted waters, y'all. Hang on - we're in for a wild ride.

01/06/2020

Thanks to Texas, the United States is the #1 oil-producing country in the WORLD!

12/10/2019

If you’ve ever encountered an I&GNRR survey in your land work, here’s a little bit of history to make it real for you.

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Luling, TX
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