• Wildcatters' Grit: Unleashing the Permian's Untapped Potential

  • 2025/01/31
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Wildcatters' Grit: Unleashing the Permian's Untapped Potential

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  • This is your Tank Battery Tales: Legends of the Permian Basin podcast.

    Welcome to Tank Battery Tales: Legends of the Permian Basin. Today, we're diving into the story of the wildcatters who built the world's most crucial oil basin.

    It all started with a man named W.H. Abrams, who drilled the first well in the Permian Basin back in 1920. His well produced only 10 barrels of oil per day, but it was enough to spark interest in the area. However, it was another wildcatter, Frank Pickrell, who would change the game. Pickrell's company, Texon Oil and Land, drilled the Santa Rita No. 1 well near Big Lake, Texas, on land leased from the University of Texas.

    The drilling process was grueling, with the crew making only five feet of progress per day. But Pickrell was determined. He even went so far as to christen the well with rose petals, given to him by a group of Catholic women investors from New York, in honor of the Patroness of Impossible Causes, Santa Rita.

    After 21 months of drilling, the Santa Rita No. 1 finally hit oil on May 28, 1923. The well blew in, producing between 30 and 100 barrels of oil per day. It was a game-changer, and soon, wildcatters from all over were flocking to the Permian Basin.

    One of those wildcatters was Michael L. Benedum, a successful independent oilman from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Benedum and another Pittsburgh wildcatter, Joseph Trees, purchased Texon properties and formed the Big Lake Oil Company in 1924. The company's president, Levi Smith, would go on to create Big Lake, the first oil company town in the Permian Basin.

    The Santa Rita No. 1 well would go on to produce for 70 years, and its discovery would launch a stampede of wildcatters to explore the full 300-mile extent of the Permian Basin. The basin would become one of the largest oil-producing regions in the United States, and it all started with the determination of men like Frank Pickrell and W.H. Abrams.

    As we look back on the history of the Permian Basin, it's clear that the wildcatters who built it were a special breed. They were men who took risks, who persevered in the face of adversity, and who believed in the impossible. And it's their stories that we'll continue to tell on Tank Battery Tales: Legends of the Permian Basin.

    For more http://www.quietplease.ai


    Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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あらすじ・解説

This is your Tank Battery Tales: Legends of the Permian Basin podcast.

Welcome to Tank Battery Tales: Legends of the Permian Basin. Today, we're diving into the story of the wildcatters who built the world's most crucial oil basin.

It all started with a man named W.H. Abrams, who drilled the first well in the Permian Basin back in 1920. His well produced only 10 barrels of oil per day, but it was enough to spark interest in the area. However, it was another wildcatter, Frank Pickrell, who would change the game. Pickrell's company, Texon Oil and Land, drilled the Santa Rita No. 1 well near Big Lake, Texas, on land leased from the University of Texas.

The drilling process was grueling, with the crew making only five feet of progress per day. But Pickrell was determined. He even went so far as to christen the well with rose petals, given to him by a group of Catholic women investors from New York, in honor of the Patroness of Impossible Causes, Santa Rita.

After 21 months of drilling, the Santa Rita No. 1 finally hit oil on May 28, 1923. The well blew in, producing between 30 and 100 barrels of oil per day. It was a game-changer, and soon, wildcatters from all over were flocking to the Permian Basin.

One of those wildcatters was Michael L. Benedum, a successful independent oilman from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Benedum and another Pittsburgh wildcatter, Joseph Trees, purchased Texon properties and formed the Big Lake Oil Company in 1924. The company's president, Levi Smith, would go on to create Big Lake, the first oil company town in the Permian Basin.

The Santa Rita No. 1 well would go on to produce for 70 years, and its discovery would launch a stampede of wildcatters to explore the full 300-mile extent of the Permian Basin. The basin would become one of the largest oil-producing regions in the United States, and it all started with the determination of men like Frank Pickrell and W.H. Abrams.

As we look back on the history of the Permian Basin, it's clear that the wildcatters who built it were a special breed. They were men who took risks, who persevered in the face of adversity, and who believed in the impossible. And it's their stories that we'll continue to tell on Tank Battery Tales: Legends of the Permian Basin.

For more http://www.quietplease.ai


Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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