El Dorado in Union County, Arkansas — The American South (West South Central)
Oil in Arkansas The Smackover Field
Photographed By Mark Hilton, August 1, 2018
1. Oil in Arkansas — The Smackover Field Marker
Inscription.
Oil in Arkansas The Smackover Field. . A little over a year after the initial oil discovery by Dr. Busey, the Oil Operators Trust--Murphy #1, a wildcat well staked on a geologic feature called the Norphlet dome, drilled into the gas-cap of what would become the huge Smackover Oil Field. The well blew out and made a crater 500 feet across and 150 deep, which swallowed up the rig, the derrick, and all of the drilling equipment. The well caught fire and created a 300 foot high natural gas flare, which made night seem like day in downtown El Dorado ten miles away. This well would lead to the discovery of the giant Smackover Oil Field, and later that summer the first oil well, the Reverend Charlie Richardson #1 was completed. The oil boom accelerated with the discovery of this huge oil field, and the populations of towns like Norphlet and Smackover grew to over 10,000 in only a few weeks. Many of the Smackover Field oil wells came in at over 50,000 barrels of oil a day, and one, the #1 Burton, gauged at 74,500 barrels a day. At the peak of the boom Arkansas was one of the leading oil producing states in the nation. During the first five years of the boom more money flowed into El Dorado than the total appraised value of all the property in the state. This influx of wealth gave El Dorado, in the 1920s, the distinction of having one of the largest concentrations of millionaires in the country, and allowed the citizens of El Dorado to construct the biggest and most elaborate county courthouse in the state, three magnificent churches, and a downtown full of fine buildings, including what was at that time one of the tallest buildings west of Mississippi, the Lion Oil Building. . This historical marker is in El Dorado in Union County Arkansas
A little over a year after the initial oil discovery by Dr. Busey, the Oil
Operators Trust--Murphy #1, a wildcat well staked on a geologic feature
called the Norphlet dome, drilled into the gas-cap of what would become the
huge Smackover Oil Field. The well blew out and made a crater 500 feet
across and 150 deep, which swallowed up the rig, the derrick, and all of the
drilling equipment. The well caught fire and created a 300 foot high natural
gas flare, which made night seem like day in downtown El Dorado ten miles
away. This well would lead to the discovery of the giant Smackover Oil
Field, and later that summer the first oil well, the Reverend Charlie
Richardson #1 was completed. The oil boom accelerated with the discovery
of this huge oil field, and the populations of towns like Norphlet and
Smackover grew to over 10,000 in only a few weeks. Many of the Smackover
Field oil wells came in at over 50,000 barrels of oil a day, and one, the #1
Burton, gauged at 74,500 barrels a day. At the peak of the boom Arkansas
was one of the leading oil producing states in the nation. During the first
five years of the boom
Click or scan to see this page online
more money flowed into El Dorado than the total
appraised value of all the property in the state. This influx of wealth gave
El Dorado, in the 1920s, the distinction of having one of the largest
concentrations of millionaires in the country, and allowed the citizens of
El Dorado to construct the biggest and most elaborate county courthouse in
the state, three magnificent churches, and a downtown full of fine buildings,
including what was at that time one of the tallest buildings west of
Mississippi, the Lion Oil Building.
Location. 33° 12.678′ N, 92° 39.784′ W. Marker is in El Dorado, Arkansas, in Union County. Marker is on South Jefferson Avenue near East Cedar Street, on the right when traveling south. Located in Oil Heritage Park. Touch for map. Marker is at or near this postal address: 117 East Cedar Street, El Dorado AR 71730, United States of America. Touch for directions.
3. 12-foot Band Wheel, part of the Oil Heritage Park
The big wheels on old pump jacks are "band wheels", which connect the pump jack to an engine of one sort or another - steam in the old days, and oil or electric these days. A giant belt, in other words the "band", enables the engine to rotate the axis of the band wheel.
Credits. This page was last revised on August 8, 2018. It was originally submitted on August 8, 2018, by Mark Hilton of Montgomery, Alabama. This page has been viewed 852 times since then and 345 times this year. Photos:1, 2, 3. submitted on August 8, 2018, by Mark Hilton of Montgomery, Alabama.