Details for Bridgetown

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5485000509

Data

Marker Number 509
Atlas Number 5485000509
Marker Title Bridgetown
Index Entry Bridgetown
Address SH 240, W of Burkburnett
City Burkburnett
County Wichita
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 530185
UTM Northing 3772998
Subject Codes oil/petroleum topics; ghost towns
Marker Year 1977
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location From Burkburnett take South 240 about 5 miles West to Marker
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text When the northwest extension of the Burkburnett oil field opened in 1919, prospectors thronged this area. Bridgetown sprang up at the Texas end of a mile-long Red River toll bridge built for oil field traffic. It became the largest and wealthiest of 12 communities that mushroomed in this area during rivalry among major oil companies and independent producers. Lease values rose from $10 to $20,000 an acre. A city of tents, shanties and a few substantial structures, Bridgetown had a long main street with a Mission church at one end and a saloon at the other. Its post office opened July 15, 1920. The population in the early 1920s was estimated at 3,500 to 10,000. Litigation over riverbed oil rights caused the U.S. Supreme Court to station a receiver in the town. He was Frederick A. Delano, uncle of future president Franklin D. Roosevelt. With aid from Texas Rangers, Delano and other leaders invoked law and order. In a few years oil yields diminished, and the jail, theaters, dance halls, and gambling houses vanished. By 1929 only 100 inhabitants remained. By 1931 the bridge was down, the post office closed in 1935. Afterward the site of the makeshift oil "capital" reverted to range and agricultural uses. (1977)

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