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{{about||the British politician|Arthur Vere Harvey, Baron Harvey of Prestbury|the politician in the colony of South Australia|Arthur Harvey (Australian politician)|the New Zealand doctor|Arthur George Harvey|the American architect|Arthur E. Harvey}} {{about||the British politician|Arthur Vere Harvey, Baron Harvey of Prestbury|the politician in the colony of South Australia|Arthur Harvey (Australian politician)|the New Zealand doctor|Arthur George Harvey|the American architect|Arthur E. Harvey}}
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Revision as of 23:44, 28 December 2020

For the British politician, see Arthur Vere Harvey, Baron Harvey of Prestbury. For the politician in the colony of South Australia, see Arthur Harvey (Australian politician). For the New Zealand doctor, see Arthur George Harvey. For the American architect, see Arthur E. Harvey.
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.

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Arthur Harvey
Born(1895-09-26)September 26, 1895
Edom, Texas
DiedMarch 22, 1976(1976-03-22) (aged 80)
Corpus Christi, Texas
Ft. Logan National CemeteryDenver, Colorado

Major Arthur Harvey was a writer, businessman, oil pioneer, and a veteran of both World War I and II.

Early life

Harvey was born in Edom, Van Zandt County, Texas, on September 26, 1895. Prior to enlisting for military service, Arthur left school at age 16 to work in a sawmill in Rusk County, Texas, handling a canthook on the skidway for $1.50 a day. Another early job was pushing a wheelbarrow filled with mortar, in order to help build a brick plant near Garrison, Texas. This job also paid $1.50 a day. This was a six-day work, but he had to spend fifty cents a day, seven days a week for meals. He then got a job picking cotton for fifty cents per hundred pounds of cotton—with free board. He made enough profit to make a good start toward growing a crop of his own in East Texas. He obtained what schooling he could at various times and places, as a farmer.

World War I

Harvey enlisted in Henderson, Texas, in Company "F" of the Fifth Texas Infantry. He worked in the company office until he left for France in 1918. He was then transferred to the Second Division of the Regular Army where he was assigned to Company M, 9th Infantry (Harvey). He received battle stars at St. Mihiel, Champagne and Meuse-Argonne. Based on his military records, Harvey was active from August 5, 1917, until August 18, 1919, and he was promoted from private to Sergeant.

The IRS and Oil

After his discharge from the Army, he returned to Rusk County and married Elizabeth Gage of Laneville, Texas, in 1919. He farmed in Rusk County for a year, but the crop was not successful. His savings were gone, so he sold off all his land and paid off all his debts. He took the civil service exam in 1920 and became a railway postal clerk in 1920. Then he was called to Houston, Texas, to work as a chief clerk. That position ended in 1923. At this time, he and his wife resided at 706 Smith Street with their daughter, Elizabeth Inez Harvey (born January 15, 1921). This address, 706 Smith Street, is where the Federal building is now located in downtown Houston. From 1923 to 1926, Harvey worked as Chief Clerk in San Antonio, Texas. By 1926, Arthur Harvey had reached the top salary possible as a railway postal clerk. When he had gone as far as he could go in the Post Office, he began working for the Bureau of Internal Revenue Intelligence Unit (Harvey).

He handled many fraud investigations for what is now the Criminal Division of the Internal Revenue Service. He was stationed in Dallas and Tyler and worked throughout the nation. Eventually he would write the manual on what constitutes criminal fraud in tax matters. That manual was still in use many years later (Joyce Neville, July 10, 2006).

In 1928 Arthur's wife, Elizabeth Gage, died. Shortly after, he met Sylva Irene Vogelsong of Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, in San Francisco, California, where she was working for the IRS. They were married in 1929. In the years that followed they had two children: Arthur Herbert Harvey in 1931 and Sylva Anne Harvey in 1933. Around this same time, while still working for the IRS, Arthur began to learn something about the oil business by auditing some oil men. After intense study (the oil business was new at the time), he had a chance to make an investment in a percentage of royalty on 35.88 acres of real estate that soon became famous as the East Texas Oil Field, home of Spindletop and other historic gushers. With the money he had saved from oil royalties, plus money earned when he continued to work for the BIR/IRS, he was able to drill his own well in 1939. He chose Marion County, Illinois, for his first operation, which resulted in the discovery of the Tonti oil field in 1939. This field has produced several million barrels of oil.

Since Mr. Harvey owned the center of this field, the "Tex" Harvey Oil Company was set up to handle its development. It was later sold. He took many chances and came up dry on nine different ventures until the tenth, which he drilled in Anderson County, Texas, in 1941. This latest drilling brought on the discovery of the East Long Lake field, all of which was now owned by the Harvey Company.

In 1948, he began drilling wells in Midland, Texas. Although he knew that little oil had been found in Midland, he took a chance anyway. He drilled down 12,000 ft (3,700 m) to a stratum in which oil had been found elsewhere in Texas. The hole was dry. Then Harvey wondered what he might have missed on the way down. Working his way back, he got a little oil. Finally, in the fine-grained hard packed sands of the Spraberry Trend at 8,000 ft (2,400 m), Harvey found oil in commercial quantities. Unlike the usual successful well that gushes from the beginning, Harvey had to pump his well to get it started . As his output rose from 60 to 120 barrels a day, the rush began. As of 2007, the Spraberry Trend was the biggest oil "play" in the U.S. with 522 Spraberry wells completed, including 23 wells owned by Harvey.

In total, Arthur Harvey discovered the following oil fields: Tonti Field, Marion, Illinois; East Long Lake Field in Anderson County, Texas; Angus Oil Field in Navarro County, Texas; Tex Harvey Oil Field in Midland County, Texas and Glasscock County, Texas, and Arthur Harvey (Wilcox) Field in Washington County, Texas.

World War II

Arthur Harvey volunteered again for military service in World War II and was commissioned a captain in the Army Air Forces. He was sent to Italy as intelligence Officer (S2) for the 449th Bombardment Group (Heavy). This unit conducted strategic bombings in Northern Italy, Southern France, Yugoslavia, and other areas. The group was given a unit citation for its attack on the Ploieşti oil fields in Romania, vital to Nazi Germany. He retired as a major.

Later life

After Major Harvey returned to the United States, he resumed active management of the "Tex" Harvey Oil Company, of which he was president and sole owner. He published the book Creed of an American Business Man.

In 1948 he purchased the Frederick W. Bonfils home in Arapahoe County, Colorado, along with 320 acres, for just over $158,000. Two years later, he purchased another 160 acres in what is now the Lakeridge subdivision for $80,000. A few years later, Harvey decided to sell most of his land. He joined Aksel Nielsen of Mortgage Investments Company and planned a community of 1,662 homes to be called Harvey Park. He sold 318 acres for #30,000,000, keeping 2 acres and his home. The new owner petitioned Denver, Colorado, for annexation in March 1953 (Catlett). In 1962 Harvey sold his mansion, liquidated his Denver businesses and moved to Dallas, Texas.

Mr. Harvey retired in 1967 and moved to Corpus Christi, Texas, with his wife. He died on March 22, 1976, and was buried in Fort Logan National Cemetery in Denver, Colorado (Section Q site 7142). Sylva Harvey returned to Denver, where she lived until her death on February 6, 1996, at age 100. She was buried next to her husband in Fort Logan National Cemetery.

See also

Portal:

Further reading

  • Catlett, Sharon R. Farmlands, Forts and Country Life, The Story of Southwest Denver, Westcliff Publishers, 2007. ISBN 9781565795457 pp. 156–157.
  • Crowell, Evelyn Miller, ed. Texas Edition: Men of Achievement, John Moranz Associates, Dallas, Texas, 1948. OCLC 2623957 pp. 66–67.
  • Farmer, Garland R. Realm of Rusk County, Published by The Henderson Times, 1951. OCLC 1440757 pp. 185–188.
  • "Prominent Businessman Of Denver in 1950s Dies." The Denver Post 24 March 1976, late ed.: 32.
  • Time Magazine, October 8, 1951.

References

  1. Crowell, Evelyn Miller, ed. Texas Edition: Men of Achievement, John Moranz Associates, Dallas, Texas, 1948. pp. 66–67.
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