Indian trader, rancher, harbor developer, oil impresario—these are
the many worlds of one of the least chronicled but most fascinating
characters of the American West. In the early, bustling years of the
frontier, a brazen young man named William McDole Lee moved from
Wisconsin to Kansas and then to Texas to forge a life for himself.
Becoming a driving entrepreneurial force in Texas's development, Lee
soon garnered the alliances and resources necessary to shape the
financial destinies of disparate groups throughout the state. His
story is expertly told in Donald F. Schofield's Indians, Cattle,
Ships, and Oil. Beginning in 1869 as a trader to the southern Cheyenne
and Arapaho tribes and fort provisioner to troops garrisoned at Camp
Supply, Indian Territory, Lee gained a partner and amassed a fortune
in short order from trading buffalo hides and robes. Vast herds of
buffalo grazing on the southern plains were killed largely on his
order. When buffalo were no longer a profitable commodity, Lee tackled
his next challenge—the cattle trade. He began with herds branded LR
that grazed on pastures near Fort Supply. Then came his LE herd in the
Texas Panhandle. Another partnership, with noted cattle rancher Lucien
Scott, resulted in the vast LS ranch, one of the most successful
operations of its day. Lee even introduced a new breed of cattle, the
Aberdeen-Angus, to the western range. But as his partnership faded,
Lee moved on to his next undertaking—the development of Texas' first
deep-water harbor. In 1888, Lee and other financiers put up one
million dollars to finance a dream: opening international trade from
the waters of the Gulf of Mexico to the mainland at the mouth of the
Brazos River. Their Brazos River Channel and Dock Company was to
construct, own, and operate a deep-water harbor at Velasco, with a
railroad link to Houston. Though threats of financial disaster loomed
large, the Velasco facility was to welcome, in its day, tugs, barges,
and three-masted schooners and to provide impetus for Houston's boom.
Yet with success, the mercurial Lee turned to yet another
challenge—oil. Starting still another partnership, Lee committed
himself to prospecting for oil on the West Columbia Ridge in Brazoria
County. Lee and crew struck oil in 1907, developing one of the first
producing wells of Brazoria County, but inadequate drilling equipment
hampered further fruitful exploration. Lee moved his rigs to the famed
Spindletop, where he perfected the technique of shallow drilling.
Though spectacular success in the oil business eluded him, Lee's
accomplishments set him squarely among the great entrepreneurs of the
Texas oil industry. Lee's exploits led him to roles in some of the
most dramatic moments in Texas and the West—Indian uprisings,
buffalo hunts, political scandals, cowboy strikes and shoot-outs,
railroad promotions, oil-well blow-outs and gushers. The people he
encountered are the famous and infamous of western history: Cheyenne
Chief Little Robe and the outlaw "Hurricane Bill" Martin; Indian Agent
John D. Miles and Major General John Pope; outlaws Tom Harris and
William Bonney, and Sheriff Pat Garrett. Altogether, Lee's biography
vividly shows one man's manipulation of people and events during the
settlement of the American frontier.
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The Story of W. M. D. Lee
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780292763920
Publisert
2016
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter