- Thomas Peter Lee
Born on
March 19 ,1871 , inPetroleum, West Virginia to Alexander and Martha Jane Mount Lee, Thomas Peter Lee left school at the age of sixteen and went to work in theoil fields , first in his native state and then inOhio . In 1903 he moved toSaratoga, Texas , where he gained employment with the newly formed Texas Company, which eventually becameTexaco , and when he left that organization ten years later, he had attained the rank of general superintendent of production. While there, however, he became friends withJ.S. Cullinan , and the two, along withEmerson F. Woodward ,Will C. Hogg , andJames L. Autry , joined in 1914 to form theFarmers Petroleum Company , of which Lee became president.In 1916 Lee, along with Cullinan, Woodward, and other associates, organized the
American Republics Corporation that later controlled twenty-one subsidiaries involved in all facets of theoil industry : prospecting, production, refining, and transportation, as well as manufacturing ships, tank cars, and oil tools. While serving on the board of directors, Lee also held the position of vice president in charge of production. But things would eventually sour between Lee and Cullinan, and several years later, they headed opposing forces bitterly engaged in a stock war for control of the corporation. Cullinan not only defeated Lee in the struggle, but he put his own son Craig into Lee’s position as vice president. More than he could bear, Lee resigned and began a lucrative career in the investment field.At the suggestion of his older brother, William Ellsworth “Bill” Lee, T. P. agreed to meet with a young
wildcatter namedMiles Franklin Yount , at the time a resident ofSour Lake, Texas , and afterward, T. P. invested $25,000 in the new enterprise that became theYount-Lee Oil Company , one of the most successful independent oil producers of its day. Yount-Lee went on to drill numerous deep-flankoil wells in bothEast Texas andLouisiana , and was responsible for theSecond Spindletop boom begun atBeaumont, Texas onNovember 14 ,1925 .Lee also became active in
agriculture andcattle breeding on his ranch inUvalde County . An avid Republican, he attended several national conventions as a delegate, and in 1924 he refused the party’s nomination for governor of Texas. He twice married, the first to Elizabeth Mann on July 14, 1892. Before she died on June 21, 1895, however, the union produced one child, Mabel Martha, who later became the wife ofTalbot Frederick Rothwell . Lee’s second marriage occurred on April 24, 1900, to Essie Mable Horton ofSavannah, Georgia , and together, the couple had five daughters: Maude, Ethel, Maxine, Thelma, and Marjorie. Contrary to many previously published accounts, T. P. Lee had no sons.At age sixty-seven, Thomas Peter Lee died of a
coronary occlusion onFebruary 4 ,1939 , and he was buried at Glenwood Cemetery inHouston , two days later. Lee’s former home, now referred to as theLink-Lee Mansion , and its surrounding area, became the basis of the founding of theUniversity of St. Thomas (Houston) which still occupies the site today. In particular, the house serves as the university’s administration building. It is listed on theNational Register of Historic Places , and as a landmark of both the State of Texas and the City of Houston.ource
McKinley, Fred B., and Greg Riley. "Black Gold to Bluegrass: From the Oil Fields of Texas to Spindletop Farm of Kentucky". Austin: Eakin Press, 2005.
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