Spindletop: Pivotal for Humankind

Bush, Halbouty Note Gusher's Impact

A century of oil-driven energy was celebrated in early January at Spindletop Hill near Beaumont, Texas, the site that essentially marked the dawn of the age of petroleum.

Spindletop's centennial anniversary was marked on Jan. 10 with thousands of participants who gathered at the site for speeches, activities and a re-enactment of the gusher that represents the oil industry's beginnings.

Speakers included former President George H.W. Bush and AAPG member and legendary wildcatter Michel T. Halbouty, who told the crowd that "the significance of Spindletop cannot be overlooked -- it started the modern petroleum industry."

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A century of oil-driven energy was celebrated in early January at Spindletop Hill near Beaumont, Texas, the site that essentially marked the dawn of the age of petroleum.

Spindletop's centennial anniversary was marked on Jan. 10 with thousands of participants who gathered at the site for speeches, activities and a re-enactment of the gusher that represents the oil industry's beginnings.

Speakers included former President George H.W. Bush and AAPG member and legendary wildcatter Michel T. Halbouty, who told the crowd that "the significance of Spindletop cannot be overlooked -- it started the modern petroleum industry."

Bush, also a veteran of the Texas oil industry, said that today's public should "let future generations know that the oil from this Texas soil helped transform the American land of liberty into a beacon of freedom, hope and, yes, opportunity to the world."

Centennial activities included a recreation of the Spindletop gusher as it occurred 100 years earlier -- to the minute.

A towering column of water spouted about 150 feet high from a replica 1901 derrick, misting those in attendance. The scene included actors who were portraying the original drillers.

"No production in the world had ever been like that," Halbouty said of the original geyser. "Not Baku (Russia), Pennsylvania or Corsicana (Texas). They were producing 50, 75, maybe 100 barrels a day. Spindletop came in at 100,000 a day.

"In one year the potential was for more oil than had been produced up to that time."

The Jan. 10 anniversary was preceded by another event marking the historic occasion -- a Houston Geological Society field trip to the site, which also featured Halbouty, who authored a book on Spindletop that was reprinted last year.

The HGS trip to Spindletop, held the weekend before the centennial observation, attracted more than 350 participants as Halbouty retold, with enthusiasm and in his own words, the story of the Spindletop discovery and its importance in world history. Halbouty's appearance and words were embraced and cheered by those in attendance.

"I believe there is a great need for explorers to learn the legend and lore of exploration," said past HGS president Charles Sternbach. "It was particularly satisfying to see a strong showing of younger professionals alongside some 'old hands' hanging on Halbouty's words."

Halbouty talked of the difficulties, ridicule and hardships faced by the Spindletop discoverers, and suggested that the best advice he could give today's explorationists is not to give up in the face of adversity.

"If they could do it," Halbouty said of the Spindletop discoverers, "why can't we?"

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