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Article
Oil in Bowling Green: A Lost Chapter in WKU's History
Alumni Magazine (Western Kentucky University
  • Jonathan Jeffrey, Western Kentucky University
Publication Date
10-1-1991
Comments

Original published in Alumni Magazine (WKU), Fall 1991. Posted with permission of the Alumni Association.

Abstract

Bowling Green became the center of a five-county oil boom in the late-1910s. Two men working on construction of Western Kentucky University’s Potter Hall were determined to not be left out of the action. Architect William J. Bray and contractor Walter Brashear formed a syndicate to lease local land for oil exploration. In August 1920, WKU’s Board of Regents granted their company, The Great Arch Oil Company, exclusive rights to drill on the school’s farm. The majority of the company’s investors were school faculty and staff. Of the three wells drilled, only one showed promise and it was soon abandoned as oil prices plummeted and the boom went bust.

Citation Information
Jonathan Jeffrey. "Oil in Bowling Green: A Lost Chapter in WKU's History" Alumni Magazine (Western Kentucky University Iss. Fall 1991 (1991)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jonathan_jeffrey/36/