Compare Constellations
Information: The first column shows data points from Railroad Commission of Texas in red. The third column shows data points from Texas State Railroad. in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
Name Entries
Railroad Commission of Texas
Shared
Texas State Railroad.
Railroad Commission of Texas
Name Components
Name :
Railroad Commission of Texas
Dates
- Name Entry
- Railroad Commission of Texas
Citation
- Name Entry
- Railroad Commission of Texas
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Texas State Railroad Commission
Name Components
Name :
Texas State Railroad Commission
Dates
- Name Entry
- Texas State Railroad Commission
Citation
- Name Entry
- Texas State Railroad Commission
[
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Texas. Railroad Commission
Name Components
Name :
Texas. Railroad Commission
Dates
- Name Entry
- Texas. Railroad Commission
Citation
- Name Entry
- Texas. Railroad Commission
[
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
RRC
Name Components
Name :
RRC
Dates
- Name Entry
- RRC
Citation
- Name Entry
- RRC
[
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"form": "alternativeForm"
}
]
Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Railroad Commission Texas, State
Name Components
Name :
Railroad Commission Texas, State
Dates
- Name Entry
- Railroad Commission Texas, State
Citation
- Name Entry
- Railroad Commission Texas, State
[
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Railroad Commission
Name Components
Name :
Railroad Commission
Dates
- Name Entry
- Railroad Commission
Citation
- Name Entry
- Railroad Commission
[
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"form": "alternativeForm"
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Texas State Railroad.
Name Components
Name :
Texas State Railroad.
Dates
- Name Entry
- Texas State Railroad.
Citation
- Name Entry
- Texas State Railroad.
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Contributors from initial SNAC EAC-CPF ingest
Citation
- Exist Dates
- Exist Dates
See the online finding aid for the agency history.
See online finding aid for agency history.
See separate record for agency history.
The Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas in Texas. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. It oversees hazardous materials pipelines and natural gas pipelines and distribution systems as well as propane, butane, compressed natural gas, and liquefied natural gas. It works to make sure a continuous, safe supply of natural gas is available to Texas consumers at the lowest reasonable price. Additionally, the Commission regulates surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel, and conducts a program for reclaiming lands that were mined and abandoned before 1975.
The Railroad Commission of Texas had its origin in the demands of the shipping public in the late 1880s that insisted that railroads be subject to regulation based on public interest. An advocate for governmental regulation, Attorney General James Stephen Hogg ran for Governor in 1890 with the issue of railroad regulation as the focal point of the campaign. Hogg was elected Governor in the general election and the voters also approved an amendment to Article X, Section 2 of the Texas Constitution that empowered the Legislature to enact statutes creating regulatory agencies. These elections paved the way for the Legislature to enact on April 3, 1891 "An Act to Establish a Railroad Commission of the State of Texas," that later was placed in the Texas Revised Civil Statutes under article 6444 et seq. (House Bills 1, 3, and 58, 22nd Texas Legislature, Regular Session).
The Commission originally consisted of three members appointed by the Governor for three-year terms. Governor Hogg appointed the first three Commissioners in 1891 including John H. Reagan, who resigned as U.S. Senator from Texas to serve as the first Chairman. The Texas Constitution, Article XIX, Section 30 was amended in 1894 to provide for elective six-year overlapping terms for the Commissioners. That same year John H. Reagan was elected and served until his retirement in 1903.
The Texas Railroad Commission was the first regulatory agency created in the State of Texas and originally had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. The legal focus was on intrastate passenger and freight activities. Interstate jurisdiction fell under the U.S. Interstate Commerce Commission. For the first twenty-five years of its existence, the Railroad Commission was largely concerned with regulating railroads, setting rates, receiving complaints, and making investigations. As other controversies arose where the Legislature deemed that the public interest could best be served by regulation, additional duties were assigned to the Railroad Commission.
The Railroad Commission's authority was broadened beginning in 1917 with the passage of the Pipeline Petroleum Law (Senate Bill 68, 35th Legislature, Regular Session) that declared pipelines to be common carriers like railroads and placed them under the Commission's jurisdiction. This was the first act to designate the Railroad Commission as the agency to administer conservation laws relating to oil and gas. The Commission's regulatory and enforcement powers in oil and gas were increased by the Oil and Gas Conservation Law (Senate Bill 350 of the 36th Legislature, Regular Session), effective June 18, 1919. This act gave the Railroad Commission jurisdiction to regulate the production of oil and gas. Acting upon this legislation, the Commission adopted in 1919 the first statewide rules regulating the oil and gas industry to promote conservation and safety, including Rule 37. This rule requires minimum distances between wells at drilling sites in order to protect field pressure and correlative rights.
The Gas Utilities Act of 1920 (House Bill 11, 36th Legislature, 3rd Called Session) gave the Commission regulatory and rate authority over individuals and businesses producing, transporting, or distributing natural gas in Texas. In 1937, following a large natural gas explosion in a school in New London, Texas, the 45th Legislature passed legislation giving the Railroad Commission the authority to adopt rules and regulations pertaining to the odorization of natural gas or liquefied petroleum gases (House Bill 1017, Regular Session).
The passage of the Public Regulatory Act of 1975 (PURA) (House Bill 819, 64th Legislature, Regular Session) required certain state regulatory agencies, including the Commission, to set the overall revenues of a utility based on its "cost of service." Regulation of liquefied petroleum was added to the Commission's responsibilities in 1939 by the 46th Legislature (House Bill 792, Regular Session). The legislation authorized the Commission to adopt and enforce safety rules and standards in the storage, handling, transportation, and odorization of butane or LP-gases. Regulation of compressed natural gas was added to the Railroad Commission's responsibilities in 1983 (Senate Bill 617, 68th Legislature, Regular Session).
Railroad regulation was initially overseen by the Main Office, later the Main and Transportation Division, then the Transportation Division and finally the Rail Division. This division was responsible for checking equipment and track, railroad and signal operations, and hazardous material handling; conducting investigations of accidents and complaints concerning railroads; and securing federal funds to improve branch lines and preserve rail service to rural areas. The Division enforced rules aimed at removing obstructions on railroad rights-of-way and operated a crossing safety education program. In 2005, the Rail Division and its remaining function, rail safety regulation, were transferred to the Texas Department of Transportation (House Bill 2702, 79th Legislature, Regular Session). The Railroad Commission no longer has any railroad-related functions.
The Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) was given authority over most aspects of the railroad industry in the early 20th century (detailed in the U.S. Transportation Act of 1920), including regulation of interstate rates, limited regulation of intrastate rates, and authority over granting railroad companies certificates of public convenience and necessity. This series concerns the last activity. Railroad companies made applications to the ICC for these certificates in order to acquire and/or operate any lines or extensions, to construct new lines, to extend or abandon lines, to acquire control over other carriers, to consolidate railroad properties or consolidate two or more companies into a single corporation, to issue and sell stock, to extend their line of financial obligation, to lease transportation equipment and facilities, to apply for loans from the ICC's revolving track fund, and in a few other situations. The ICC also undertook recapture proceedings against companies reporting excess income.
(Sources: Guide to Texas State Agencies, various editions; general laws and statutes; and the records themselves.)
The Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas in Texas. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. It oversees hazardous materials pipelines and natural gas pipelines and distribution systems as well as propane, butane, compressed natural gas, and liquefied natural gas. It works to make sure a continuous, safe supply of natural gas is available to Texas consumers at the lowest reasonable price. Additionally, the Commission regulates surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel, and conducts a program for reclaiming lands that were mined and abandoned before 1975.
The Railroad Commission of Texas had its origin in the demands of the shipping public in the late 1880s that insisted that railroads be subject to regulation based on public interest. An advocate for governmental regulation, Attorney General James Stephen Hogg ran for Governor in 1890 with the issue of railroad regulation as the focal point of the campaign. Hogg was elected Governor in the general election and the voters also approved an amendment to Article X, Section 2 of the Texas Constitution that empowered the Legislature to enact statutes creating regulatory agencies. These elections paved the way for the Legislature to enact on April 3, 1891 "An Act to Establish a Railroad Commission of the State of Texas," that later was placed in the Texas Revised Civil Statutes under article 6444 et seq. (House Bills 1, 3, and 58, 22nd Texas Legislature, Regular Session).
The Commission originally consisted of three members appointed by the Governor for three-year terms. Governor Hogg appointed the first three Commissioners in 1891 including John H. Reagan, who resigned as U.S. Senator from Texas to serve as the first Chairman. The Texas Constitution, Article XIX, Section 30 was amended in 1894 to provide for elective six-year overlapping terms for the Commissioners. That same year John H. Reagan was elected and served until his retirement in 1903.
The Texas Railroad Commission was the first regulatory agency created in the State of Texas and originally had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. The legal focus was on intrastate passenger and freight activities. Interstate jurisdiction fell under the U.S. Interstate Commerce Commission. For the first twenty-five years of its existence, the Railroad Commission was largely concerned with regulating railroads, setting rates, receiving complaints, and making investigations. As other controversies arose where the Legislature deemed that the public interest could best be served by regulation, additional duties were assigned to the Railroad Commission.
The Railroad Commission's authority was broadened beginning in 1917 with the passage of the Pipeline Petroleum Law (Senate Bill 68, 35th Legislature, Regular Session) that declared pipelines to be common carriers like railroads and placed them under the Commission's jurisdiction. This was the first act to designate the Railroad Commission as the agency to administer conservation laws relating to oil and gas. The Commission's regulatory and enforcement powers in oil and gas were increased by the Oil and Gas Conservation Law (Senate Bill 350 of the 36th Legislature, Regular Session), effective June 18, 1919. This act gave the Railroad Commission jurisdiction to regulate the production of oil and gas. Acting upon this legislation, the Commission adopted in 1919 the first statewide rules regulating the oil and gas industry to promote conservation and safety, including Rule 37. This rule requires minimum distances between wells at drilling sites in order to protect field pressure and correlative rights.
The Gas Utilities Act of 1920 (House Bill 11, 36th Legislature, 3rd Called Session) gave the Commission regulatory and rate authority over individuals and businesses producing, transporting, or distributing natural gas in Texas. In 1937, following a large natural gas explosion in a school in New London, Texas, the 45th Legislature passed legislation giving the Railroad Commission the authority to adopt rules and regulations pertaining to the odorization of natural gas or liquefied petroleum gases (House Bill 1017, Regular Session).
The passage of the Public Regulatory Act of 1975 (PURA) (House Bill 819, 64th Legislature, Regular Session) required certain state regulatory agencies, including the Commission, to set the overall revenues of a utility based on its "cost of service." Regulation of liquefied petroleum was added to the Commission's responsibilities in 1939 by the 46th Legislature (House Bill 792, Regular Session). The legislation authorized the Commission to adopt and enforce safety rules and standards in the storage, handling, transportation, and odorization of butane or LP-gases. Regulation of compressed natural gas was added to the Railroad Commission's responsibilities in 1983 (Senate Bill 617, 68th Legislature, Regular Session).
Railroad regulation was initially overseen by the Main Office, later the Main and Transportation Division, then the Transportation Division and finally the Rail Division. This division was responsible for checking equipment and track, railroad and signal operations, and hazardous material handling; conducting investigations of accidents and complaints concerning railroads; and securing federal funds to improve branch lines and preserve rail service to rural areas. The Division enforced rules aimed at removing obstructions on railroad rights-of-way and operated a crossing safety education program. In 2005, the Rail Division and its remaining function, rail safety regulation, were transferred to the Texas Department of Transportation (House Bill 2702, 79th Legislature, Regular Session). The Railroad Commission no longer has any railroad-related functions.
The Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) was given authority over most aspects of the railroad industry in the early 20th century (detailed in the U.S. Transportation Act of 1920), including regulation of interstate rates, limited regulation of intrastate rates, and authority over granting railroad companies certificates of public convenience and necessity. This series concerns the last activity. Railroad companies made applications to the ICC for these certificates in order to acquire and/or operate any lines or extensions, to construct new lines, to extend or abandon lines, to acquire control over other carriers, to consolidate railroad properties or consolidate two or more companies into a single corporation, to issue and sell stock, to extend their line of financial obligation, to lease transportation equipment and facilities, to apply for loans from the ICC's revolving track fund, and in a few other situations. The ICC also undertook recapture proceedings against companies reporting excess income.
(Sources: Guide to Texas State Agencies, various editions; general laws and statutes; and the records themselves.)
The Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas in Texas. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. It oversees hazardous materials pipelines and natural gas pipelines and distribution systems as well as propane, butane, compressed natural gas, and liquefied natural gas. It works to make sure a continuous, safe supply of natural gas is available to Texas consumers at the lowest reasonable price. Additionally, the Commission regulates surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel, and conducts a program for reclaiming lands that were mined and abandoned before 1975.
The Railroad Commission of Texas had its origin in the demands of the shipping public in the late 1880s that insisted that railroads be subject to regulation based on public interest. An advocate for governmental regulation, Attorney General James Stephen Hogg ran for Governor in 1890 with the issue of railroad regulation as the focal point of the campaign. Hogg was elected Governor in the general election and the voters also approved an amendment to Article X, Section 2 of the Texas Constitution that empowered the Legislature to enact statutes creating regulatory agencies. These elections paved the way for the Legislature to enact on April 3, 1891 "An Act to Establish a Railroad Commission of the State of Texas," that later was placed in the Texas Revised Civil Statutes under article 6444 et seq. (House Bills 1, 3, and 58, 22nd Texas Legislature, Regular Session).
The Commission originally consisted of three members appointed by the Governor for three-year terms. Governor Hogg appointed the first three Commissioners in 1891 including John H. Reagan, who resigned as U.S. Senator from Texas to serve as the first Chairman. The Texas Constitution, Article XIX, Section 30 was amended in 1894 to provide for elective six-year overlapping terms for the Commissioners. That same year John H. Reagan was elected and served until his retirement in 1903.
The Texas Railroad Commission was the first regulatory agency created in the State of Texas and originally had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. The legal focus was on intrastate passenger and freight activities. Interstate jurisdiction fell under the U.S. Interstate Commerce Commission. For the first twenty-five years of its existence, the Railroad Commission was largely concerned with regulating railroads, setting rates, receiving complaints, and making investigations. As other controversies arose where the Legislature deemed that the public interest could best be served by regulation, additional duties were assigned to the Railroad Commission.
The Railroad Commission's authority was broadened beginning in 1917 with the passage of the Pipeline Petroleum Law (Senate Bill 68, 35th Legislature, Regular Session) that declared pipelines to be common carriers like railroads and placed them under the Commission's jurisdiction. This was the first act to designate the Railroad Commission as the agency to administer conservation laws relating to oil and gas. The Commission's regulatory and enforcement powers in oil and gas were increased by the Oil and Gas Conservation Law (Senate Bill 350 of the 36th Legislature, Regular Session), effective June 18, 1919. This act gave the Railroad Commission jurisdiction to regulate the production of oil and gas. Acting upon this legislation, the Commission adopted in 1919 the first statewide rules regulating the oil and gas industry to promote conservation and safety, including Rule 37. This rule requires minimum distances between wells at drilling sites in order to protect field pressure and correlative rights.
The Gas Utilities Act of 1920 (House Bill 11, 36th Legislature, 3rd Called Session) gave the Commission regulatory and rate authority over individuals and businesses producing, transporting, or distributing natural gas in Texas. In 1937, following a large natural gas explosion in a school in New London, Texas, the 45th Legislature passed legislation giving the Railroad Commission the authority to adopt rules and regulations pertaining to the odorization of natural gas or liquefied petroleum gases (House Bill 1017, Regular Session).
The passage of the Public Regulatory Act of 1975 (PURA) (House Bill 819, 64th Legislature, Regular Session) required certain state regulatory agencies, including the Commission, to set the overall revenues of a utility based on its "cost of service." Regulation of liquefied petroleum was added to the Commission's responsibilities in 1939 by the 46th Legislature (House Bill 792, Regular Session). The legislation authorized the Commission to adopt and enforce safety rules and standards in the storage, handling, transportation, and odorization of butane or LP-gases. Regulation of compressed natural gas was added to the Railroad Commission's responsibilities in 1983 (Senate Bill 617, 68th Legislature, Regular Session).
The Motor Bus Law of 1927, House Bill 50, 40th Legislature, Regular Session, and the Motor Carrier Law of 1929, House Bill 654, 41st Legislature, Regular Session, extended the Commission's regulatory powers to commercial transportation of persons and property on state highways. In 1995, following federal deregulation of motor carriers, the 74th Legislature eliminated the agency's authority to regulate commercial carriers involved in intrastate transport and transferred the remaining responsibilities related to commercial carriers (motor carrier registration, insurance verification, and safety) to the Texas Department of Transportation (Senate Bill 971, Regular Session), and the Department of Public Safety (Senate Bill 3, Regular Session).
The Texas Surface Mining and Reclamation Act of 1975, Senate Bill 55, 64th Legislature, Regular Session, authorized the Commission to regulate the exploration for and surface mining of coal, lignite, and uranium within the state and to oversee the reclamation of lands disturbed by surface mining operations. In 1991, the 72nd Legislature, Regular Session, passed House Bill 451, the Texas Aggregate Quarry and Pit Safety Act, that authorized the Commission to regulate quarry and pit operations.
Railroad regulation was initially overseen by the Main Office, later the Main and Transportation Division, then the Transportation Division and finally the Rail Division. This division was responsible for checking equipment and track, railroad and signal operations, and hazardous material handling; conducting investigations of accidents and complaints concerning railroads; and securing federal funds to improve branch lines and preserve rail service to rural areas. The Division enforced rules aimed at removing obstructions on railroad rights-of-way and operated a crossing safety education program. In 2005, the Rail Division and its remaining function, rail safety regulation, were transferred to the Texas Department of Transportation (House Bill 2702, 79th Legislature, Regular Session). The Railroad Commission no longer has any railroad-related functions.
(Sources: Guide to Texas State Agencies, various editions; general laws and statutes; the Railroad Commission website (http://www.rrc.state.tx.us/about/index.php), accessed on February 9, 2009; and the records themselves.)
The Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas in Texas. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. It oversees hazardous materials pipelines and natural gas pipelines and distribution systems as well as propane, butane, compressed natural gas, and liquefied natural gas. It works to make sure a continuous, safe supply of natural gas is available to Texas consumers at the lowest reasonable price. Additionally, the Commission regulates surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel, and conducts a program for reclaiming lands that were mined and abandoned before 1975.
The Railroad Commission of Texas had its origin in the demands of the shipping public in the late 1880s that insisted that railroads be subject to regulation based on public interest. An advocate for governmental regulation, Attorney General James Stephen Hogg ran for Governor in 1890 with the issue of railroad regulation as the focal point of the campaign. Hogg was elected Governor in the general election and the voters also approved an amendment to Article X, Section 2 of the Texas Constitution that empowered the Legislature to enact statutes creating regulatory agencies. These elections paved the way for the Legislature to enact on April 3, 1891 "An Act to Establish a Railroad Commission of the State of Texas," that later was placed in the Texas Revised Civil Statutes under article 6444 et seq. (House Bills 1, 3, and 58, 22nd Texas Legislature, Regular Session).
The Commission originally consisted of three members appointed by the Governor for three-year terms. Governor Hogg appointed the first three Commissioners in 1891 including John H. Reagan, who resigned as U.S. Senator from Texas to serve as the first Chairman. The Texas Constitution, Article XIX, Section 30 was amended in 1894 to provide for elective six-year overlapping terms for the Commissioners. That same year John H. Reagan was elected and served until his retirement in 1903.
The Texas Railroad Commission was the first regulatory agency created in the State of Texas and originally had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. The legal focus was on intrastate passenger and freight activities. Interstate jurisdiction fell under the U.S. Interstate Commerce Commission. For the first twenty-five years of its existence, the Railroad Commission was largely concerned with regulating railroads, setting rates, receiving complaints, and making investigations. As other controversies arose where the Legislature deemed that the public interest could best be served by regulation, additional duties were assigned to the Railroad Commission.
The Railroad Commission's authority was broadened beginning in 1917 with the passage of the Pipeline Petroleum Law (Senate Bill 68, 35th Legislature, Regular Session) that declared pipelines to be common carriers like railroads and placed them under the Commission's jurisdiction. This was the first act to designate the Railroad Commission as the agency to administer conservation laws relating to oil and gas. The Commission's regulatory and enforcement powers in oil and gas were increased by the Oil and Gas Conservation Law (Senate Bill 350 of the 36th Legislature, Regular Session), effective June 18, 1919. This act gave the Railroad Commission jurisdiction to regulate the production of oil and gas. Acting upon this legislation, the Commission adopted in 1919 the first statewide rules regulating the oil and gas industry to promote conservation and safety, including Rule 37. This rule requires minimum distances between wells at drilling sites in order to protect field pressure and correlative rights.
The Gas Utilities Act of 1920 (House Bill 11, 36th Legislature, 3rd Called Session) gave the Commission regulatory and rate authority over individuals and businesses producing, transporting, or distributing natural gas in Texas. In 1937, following a large natural gas explosion in a school in New London, Texas, the 45th Legislature passed legislation giving the Railroad Commission the authority to adopt rules and regulations pertaining to the odorization of natural gas or liquefied petroleum gases (House Bill 1017, Regular Session).
The passage of the Public Regulatory Act of 1975 (PURA) (House Bill 819, 64th Legislature, Regular Session) required certain state regulatory agencies, including the Commission, to set the overall revenues of a utility based on its "cost of service." Regulation of liquefied petroleum was added to the Commission's responsibilities in 1939 by the 46th Legislature (House Bill 792, Regular Session). The legislation authorized the Commission to adopt and enforce safety rules and standards in the storage, handling, transportation, and odorization of butane or LP-gases. Regulation of compressed natural gas was added to the Railroad Commission's responsibilities in 1983 (Senate Bill 617, 68th Legislature, Regular Session).
Railroad regulation was initially overseen by the Main Office, later the Main and Transportation Division, then the Transportation Division and finally the Rail Division. This division was responsible for checking equipment and track, railroad and signal operations, and hazardous material handling; conducting investigations of accidents and complaints concerning railroads; and securing federal funds to improve branch lines and preserve rail service to rural areas. The Division enforced rules aimed at removing obstructions on railroad rights-of-way and operated a crossing safety education program. In 2005, the Rail Division and its remaining function, rail safety regulation, were transferred to the Texas Department of Transportation (House Bill 2702, 79th Legislature, Regular Session). The Railroad Commission no longer has any railroad-related functions.
(Sources: Guide to Texas State Agencies, various editions; general laws and statutes; and the records themselves.)
The Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas in Texas. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. It oversees hazardous materials pipelines and natural gas pipelines and distribution systems as well as propane, butane, compressed natural gas, and liquefied natural gas. It works to make sure a continuous, safe supply of natural gas is available to Texas consumers at the lowest reasonable price. Additionally, the Commission regulates surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel, and conducts a program for reclaiming lands that were mined and abandoned before 1975.
The Railroad Commission of Texas had its origin in the demands of the shipping public in the late 1880s that insisted that railroads be subject to regulation based on public interest. An advocate for governmental regulation, Attorney General James Stephen Hogg ran for Governor in 1890 with the issue of railroad regulation as the focal point of the campaign. Hogg was elected Governor in the general election and the voters also approved an amendment to Article X, Section 2 of the Texas Constitution that empowered the Legislature to enact statutes creating regulatory agencies. These elections paved the way for the Legislature to enact on April 3, 1891 "An Act to Establish a Railroad Commission of the State of Texas," that later was placed in the Texas Revised Civil Statutes under article 6444 et seq. (House Bills 1, 3, and 58, 22nd Texas Legislature, Regular Session).
The Commission originally consisted of three members appointed by the Governor for three-year terms. Governor Hogg appointed the first three Commissioners in 1891 including John H. Reagan, who resigned as U.S. Senator from Texas to serve as the first Chairman. The Texas Constitution, Article XIX, Section 30 was amended in 1894 to provide for elective six-year overlapping terms for the Commissioners. That same year John H. Reagan was elected and served until his retirement in 1903.
The Texas Railroad Commission was the first regulatory agency created in the State of Texas and originally had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. The legal focus was on intrastate passenger and freight activities. Interstate jurisdiction fell under the U.S. Interstate Commerce Commission. For the first twenty-five years of its existence, the Railroad Commission was largely concerned with regulating railroads, setting rates, receiving complaints, and making investigations. As other controversies arose where the Legislature deemed that the public interest could best be served by regulation, additional duties were assigned to the Railroad Commission.
The Railroad Commission's authority was broadened beginning in 1917 with the passage of the Pipeline Petroleum Law (Senate Bill 68, 35th Legislature, Regular Session) that declared pipelines to be common carriers like railroads and placed them under the Commission's jurisdiction. This was the first act to designate the Railroad Commission as the agency to administer conservation laws relating to oil and gas. The Commission's regulatory and enforcement powers in oil and gas were increased by the Oil and Gas Conservation Law (Senate Bill 350 of the 36th Legislature, Regular Session), effective June 18, 1919. This act gave the Railroad Commission jurisdiction to regulate the production of oil and gas. Acting upon this legislation, the Commission adopted in 1919 the first statewide rules regulating the oil and gas industry to promote conservation and safety, including Rule 37. This rule requires minimum distances between wells at drilling sites in order to protect field pressure and correlative rights.
The Gas Utilities Act of 1920 (House Bill 11, 36th Legislature, 3rd Called Session) gave the Commission regulatory and rate authority over individuals and businesses producing, transporting, or distributing natural gas in Texas. In 1937, following a large natural gas explosion in a school in New London, Texas, the 45th Legislature passed legislation giving the Railroad Commission the authority to adopt rules and regulations pertaining to the odorization of natural gas or liquefied petroleum gases (House Bill 1017, Regular Session).
The passage of the Public Regulatory Act of 1975 (PURA) (House Bill 819, 64th Legislature, Regular Session) required certain state regulatory agencies, including the Commission, to set the overall revenues of a utility based on its "cost of service." Regulation of liquefied petroleum was added to the Commission's responsibilities in 1939 by the 46th Legislature (House Bill 792, Regular Session). The legislation authorized the Commission to adopt and enforce safety rules and standards in the storage, handling, transportation, and odorization of butane or LP-gases. Regulation of compressed natural gas was added to the Railroad Commission's responsibilities in 1983 (Senate Bill 617, 68th Legislature, Regular Session).
The Motor Bus Law of 1927, House Bill 50, 40th Legislature, Regular Session, and the Motor Carrier Law of 1929, House Bill 654, 41st Legislature, Regular Session, extended the Commission's regulatory powers to commercial transportation of persons and property on state highways. In 1995, following federal deregulation of motor carriers, the 74th Legislature eliminated the agency's authority to regulate commercial carriers involved in intrastate transport and transferred the remaining responsibilities related to commercial carriers (motor carrier registration, insurance verification, and safety) to the Texas Department of Transportation (Senate Bill 971, Regular Session), and the Department of Public Safety (Senate Bill 3, Regular Session).
The Texas Surface Mining and Reclamation Act of 1975, Senate Bill 55, 64th Legislature, Regular Session, authorized the Commission to regulate the exploration for and surface mining of coal, lignite, and uranium within the state and to oversee the reclamation of lands disturbed by surface mining operations. In 1991, the 72nd Legislature, Regular Session, passed House Bill 451, the Texas Aggregate Quarry and Pit Safety Act, that authorized the Commission to regulate quarry and pit operations.
Railroad regulation was initially overseen by the Main Office, later the Main and Transportation Division, then the Transportation Division and finally the Rail Division. This division was responsible for checking equipment and track, railroad and signal operations, and hazardous material handling; conducting investigations of accidents and complaints concerning railroads; and securing federal funds to improve branch lines and preserve rail service to rural areas. The Division enforced rules aimed at removing obstructions on railroad rights-of-way and operated a crossing safety education program. In 2005, the Rail Division and its remaining function, rail safety regulation, were transferred to the Texas Department of Transportation (House Bill 2702, 79th Legislature, Regular Session). The Railroad Commission no longer has any railroad-related functions.
The Oil and Gas Division works to prevent the waste of oil, gas, and geothermal resources and to prevent the pollution of fresh water from oil and gas operations. The division holds statewide hearings on market demand and provides for equitable production among operators by establishing monthly production allowables. It issues drilling permits, reviews and approves oil and gas well completions, collects data on oil and gas operations, and promotes public safety. It also protects underground drinking water through regulation of the underground injection of fluids in oil field operations, a program approved by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under the Federal Safe Drinking Water Act. It oversees well plugging operations, site remediation, underground hydrocarbon storage, hazardous waste management, and maintains a large amount of data on wells - their location, production, etc. The division also investigates complaints and conducts other investigations. This division maintains 10 district offices where field enforcement and support personnel monitor oil and gas operations. The commission does not have the authority to set oil and gas prices at the wellhead.
The Gas Services Division, formerly the Gas Utilities Division, works to ensure that a continuous safe supply of gas is available to Texas consumers at the lowest, reasonable rates. It establishes rates and services that are fair and reasonable for gas utilities and their customers and enforces those rates. The division also focuses on regulatory policy and analysis, finding and eliminating natural gas transportation problems, and has oversight of intrastate gathering and storage services. Safety-related duties regarding natural gas and hazardous liquids were transferred to the Safety Division in recent years.
The Safety Division operates the Commission's Pipeline Safety program, which regulates the safety of intrastate natural gas pipelines and hazardous liquid pipelines in Texas. The Commission is a certified agent of the U.S. Department of Transportation for the enforcement of federal pipeline safety regulations for intrastate pipeline facilities pursuant to the federal Pipeline Safety Act.
The Surface Mining and Reclamation Division oversees the exploration of and surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel and the reclamation of land disturbed by surface mining operations. It also conducts a program for reclaiming lands that were mined before 1975 and left unrestored. Companies must have a permit from the commission for each mining site operated in the state. Before permits are issued, the companies must submit a performance bond that will provide funds for reclamation if the company fails to do an adequate reclamation job. The division also studies mining sites to ensure the mining will not harm the quality or quantity of water in the area. It determines which abandoned mines pose the greatest threat to public health and safety and the environment, and designs a reclamation plan to address the greatest problems. Private contractors are used to do the reclamation.
The Office of the General Counsel is the agency's principal legal advisor. The Enforcement Section prosecutes individuals and companies charged with violating Commission rules and regulations. This section also works with the Office of the Attorney General on all lawsuits to which the Commission is a party. The Hearings Section conducts hearings in administrative contested cases involving oil and gas; gas utilities; pipeline safety; LPG, CNG, and LNG fuel safety; and surface mining matters. It also handles some rulemaking functions. The Special Counsel Section advises the Commission on compliance with state and federal laws regarding contracts, open records, records retention, personnel matters, ethics, and handles environmental legal issues related to the Commission's surface mining and oil and gas programs. It is also responsible for scheduling hearings; maintaining and updating hearings files; preparing notices of hearing and open meeting postings for the Secretary of State; and responding to inquiries regarding scheduling of hearings.
The Alternative Fuels Research and Education Division was created by the Legislature in 1991 and was charged with researching and educating the public about propane (LP-gas, LPG) as an environmentally and economically beneficial alternative fuel. The division also operates the Commission's licensing, examination, certification and training programs for propane company managers and technicians statewide.
Railroad Commission support divisions include the Government and Media Affairs Office, Personnel, Administration, Information Technology Services, and the Office of Internal Audit.
(Sources: Guide to Texas State Agencies, various editions; general laws and statutes; the Railroad Commission website ( http://www.rrc.state.tx.us/about/index.php ), accessed on March 23, 2009; and the records themselves.)
The Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas in Texas. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. It oversees hazardous materials pipelines and natural gas pipelines and distribution systems as well as propane, butane, compressed natural gas, and liquefied natural gas. It works to make sure a continuous, safe supply of natural gas is available to Texas consumers at the lowest reasonable price. Additionally, the Commission regulates surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel, and conducts a program for reclaiming lands that were mined and abandoned before 1975.
The Railroad Commission of Texas had its origin in the demands of the shipping public in the late 1880s that insisted that railroads be subject to regulation based on public interest. An advocate for governmental regulation, Attorney General James Stephen Hogg ran for Governor in 1890 with the issue of railroad regulation as the focal point of the campaign. Hogg was elected Governor in the general election and the voters also approved an amendment to Article X, Section 2 of the Texas Constitution that empowered the Legislature to enact statutes creating regulatory agencies. These elections paved the way for the Legislature to enact on April 3, 1891 "An Act to Establish a Railroad Commission of the State of Texas," that later was placed in the Texas Revised Civil Statutes under article 6444 et seq. (House Bills 1, 3, and 58, 22nd Texas Legislature, Regular Session).
The Commission originally consisted of three members appointed by the Governor for three-year terms. Governor Hogg appointed the first three Commissioners in 1891 including John H. Reagan, who resigned as U.S. Senator from Texas to serve as the first Chairman. The Texas Constitution, Article XIX, Section 30 was amended in 1894 to provide for elective six-year overlapping terms for the Commissioners. That same year John H. Reagan was elected and served until his retirement in 1903.
The Texas Railroad Commission was the first regulatory agency created in the State of Texas and originally had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. The legal focus was on intrastate passenger and freight activities. Interstate jurisdiction fell under the U.S. Interstate Commerce Commission. For the first twenty-five years of its existence, the Railroad Commission was largely concerned with regulating railroads, setting rates, receiving complaints, and making investigations. As other controversies arose where the Legislature deemed that the public interest could best be served by regulation, additional duties were assigned to the Railroad Commission.
The Railroad Commission's authority was broadened beginning in 1917 with the passage of the Pipeline Petroleum Law (Senate Bill 68, 35th Legislature, Regular Session) that declared pipelines to be common carriers like railroads and placed them under the Commission's jurisdiction. This was the first act to designate the Railroad Commission as the agency to administer conservation laws relating to oil and gas. The Commission's regulatory and enforcement powers in oil and gas were increased by the Oil and Gas Conservation Law (Senate Bill 350 of the 36th Legislature, Regular Session), effective June 18, 1919. This act gave the Railroad Commission jurisdiction to regulate the production of oil and gas. Acting upon this legislation, the Commission adopted in 1919 the first statewide rules regulating the oil and gas industry to promote conservation and safety, including Rule 37. This rule requires minimum distances between wells at drilling sites in order to protect field pressure and correlative rights.
The Gas Utilities Act of 1920 (House Bill 11, 36th Legislature, 3rd Called Session) gave the Commission regulatory and rate authority over individuals and businesses producing, transporting, or distributing natural gas in Texas. In 1937, following a large natural gas explosion in a school in New London, Texas, the 45th Legislature passed legislation giving the Railroad Commission the authority to adopt rules and regulations pertaining to the odorization of natural gas or liquefied petroleum gases (House Bill 1017, Regular Session).
The passage of the Public Regulatory Act of 1975 (PURA) (House Bill 819, 64th Legislature, Regular Session) required certain state regulatory agencies, including the Commission, to set the overall revenues of a utility based on its "cost of service." Regulation of liquefied petroleum was added to the Commission's responsibilities in 1939 by the 46th Legislature (House Bill 792, Regular Session). The legislation authorized the Commission to adopt and enforce safety rules and standards in the storage, handling, transportation, and odorization of butane or LP-gases. Regulation of compressed natural gas was added to the Railroad Commission's responsibilities in 1983 (Senate Bill 617, 68th Legislature, Regular Session).
Railroad regulation was initially overseen by the Main Office, later the Main and Transportation Division, then the Transportation Division and finally the Rail Division. This division was responsible for checking equipment and track, railroad and signal operations, and hazardous material handling; conducting investigations of accidents and complaints concerning railroads; and securing federal funds to improve branch lines and preserve rail service to rural areas. The Division enforced rules aimed at removing obstructions on railroad rights-of-way and operated a crossing safety education program. In 2005, the Rail Division and its remaining function, rail safety regulation, were transferred to the Texas Department of Transportation (House Bill 2702, 79th Legislature, Regular Session). The Railroad Commission no longer has any railroad-related functions.
(Sources: Guide to Texas State Agencies, various editions; general laws and statutes; and the records themselves.)
The Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas in Texas. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. It oversees hazardous materials pipelines and natural gas pipelines and distribution systems as well as propane, butane, compressed natural gas, and liquefied natural gas. It works to make sure a continuous, safe supply of natural gas is available to Texas consumers at the lowest reasonable price. Additionally, the Commission regulates surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel, and conducts a program for reclaiming lands that were mined and abandoned before 1975.
The Railroad Commission of Texas had its origin in the demands of the shipping public in the late 1880s that insisted that railroads be subject to regulation based on public interest. An advocate for governmental regulation, Attorney General James Stephen Hogg ran for Governor in 1890 with the issue of railroad regulation as the focal point of the campaign. Hogg was elected Governor in the general election and the voters also approved an amendment to Article X, Section 2 of the Texas Constitution that empowered the Legislature to enact statutes creating regulatory agencies. These elections paved the way for the Legislature to enact on April 3, 1891 "An Act to Establish a Railroad Commission of the State of Texas," that later was placed in the Texas Revised Civil Statutes under article 6444 et seq. (House Bills 1, 3, and 58, 22nd Texas Legislature, Regular Session).
The Commission originally consisted of three members appointed by the Governor for three-year terms. Governor Hogg appointed the first three Commissioners in 1891 including John H. Reagan, who resigned as U.S. Senator from Texas to serve as the first Chairman. The Texas Constitution, Article XIX, Section 30 was amended in 1894 to provide for elective six-year overlapping terms for the Commissioners. That same year John H. Reagan was elected and served until his retirement in 1903.
The Texas Railroad Commission was the first regulatory agency created in the State of Texas and originally had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. The legal focus was on intrastate passenger and freight activities. Interstate jurisdiction fell under the U.S. Interstate Commerce Commission. For the first twenty-five years of its existence, the Railroad Commission was largely concerned with regulating railroads, setting rates, receiving complaints, and making investigations. As other controversies arose where the Legislature deemed that the public interest could best be served by regulation, additional duties were assigned to the Railroad Commission.
The Railroad Commission's authority was broadened beginning in 1917 with the passage of the Pipeline Petroleum Law (Senate Bill 68, 35th Legislature, Regular Session) that declared pipelines to be common carriers like railroads and placed them under the Commission's jurisdiction. This was the first act to designate the Railroad Commission as the agency to administer conservation laws relating to oil and gas. The Commission's regulatory and enforcement powers in oil and gas were increased by the Oil and Gas Conservation Law (Senate Bill 350 of the 36th Legislature, Regular Session), effective June 18, 1919. This act gave the Railroad Commission jurisdiction to regulate the production of oil and gas. Acting upon this legislation, the Commission adopted in 1919 the first statewide rules regulating the oil and gas industry to promote conservation and safety, including Rule 37. This rule requires minimum distances between wells at drilling sites in order to protect field pressure and correlative rights.
The Gas Utilities Act of 1920 (House Bill 11, 36th Legislature, 3rd Called Session) gave the Commission regulatory and rate authority over individuals and businesses producing, transporting, or distributing natural gas in Texas. In 1937, following a large natural gas explosion in a school in New London, Texas, the 45th Legislature passed legislation giving the Railroad Commission the authority to adopt rules and regulations pertaining to the odorization of natural gas or liquefied petroleum gases (House Bill 1017, Regular Session).
The passage of the Public Regulatory Act of 1975 (PURA) (House Bill 819, 64th Legislature, Regular Session) required certain state regulatory agencies, including the Commission, to set the overall revenues of a utility based on its "cost of service." Regulation of liquefied petroleum was added to the Commission's responsibilities in 1939 by the 46th Legislature (House Bill 792, Regular Session). The legislation authorized the Commission to adopt and enforce safety rules and standards in the storage, handling, transportation, and odorization of butane or LP-gases. Regulation of compressed natural gas was added to the Railroad Commission's responsibilities in 1983 (Senate Bill 617, 68th Legislature, Regular Session).
The Motor Bus Law of 1927, House Bill 50, 40th Legislature, Regular Session, and the Motor Carrier Law of 1929, House Bill 654, 41st Legislature, Regular Session, extended the Commission's regulatory powers to commercial transportation of persons and property on state highways. In 1995, following federal deregulation of motor carriers, the 74th Legislature eliminated the agency's authority to regulate commercial carriers involved in intrastate transport and transferred the remaining responsibilities related to commercial carriers (motor carrier registration, insurance verification, and safety) to the Texas Department of Transportation (Senate Bill 971, Regular Session), and the Department of Public Safety (Senate Bill 3, Regular Session).
The Texas Surface Mining and Reclamation Act of 1975, Senate Bill 55, 64th Legislature, Regular Session, authorized the Commission to regulate the exploration for and surface mining of coal, lignite, and uranium within the state and to oversee the reclamation of lands disturbed by surface mining operations. In 1991, the 72nd Legislature, Regular Session, passed House Bill 451, the Texas Aggregate Quarry and Pit Safety Act, that authorized the Commission to regulate quarry and pit operations.
Railroad regulation was initially overseen by the Main Office, later the Main and Transportation Division, then the Transportation Division and finally the Rail Division. This division was responsible for checking equipment and track, railroad and signal operations, and hazardous material handling; conducting investigations of accidents and complaints concerning railroads; and securing federal funds to improve branch lines and preserve rail service to rural areas. The Division enforced rules aimed at removing obstructions on railroad rights-of-way and operated a crossing safety education program. In 2005, the Rail Division and its remaining function, rail safety regulation, were transferred to the Texas Department of Transportation (House Bill 2702, 79th Legislature, Regular Session). The Railroad Commission no longer has any railroad-related functions.
(Sources: Guide to Texas State Agencies, various editions; general laws and statutes; the Railroad Commission website (http://www.rrc.state.tx.us/about/index.php), accessed on February 9, 2009; and the records themselves.)
The Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas in Texas. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. It oversees hazardous materials pipelines and natural gas pipelines and distribution systems as well as propane, butane, compressed natural gas, and liquefied natural gas. It works to make sure a continuous, safe supply of natural gas is available to Texas consumers at the lowest reasonable price. Additionally, the Commission regulates surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel, and conducts a program for reclaiming lands that were mined and abandoned before 1975.
The Railroad Commission of Texas had its origin in the demands of the shipping public in the late 1880s that insisted that railroads be subject to regulation based on public interest. An advocate for governmental regulation, Attorney General James Stephen Hogg ran for Governor in 1890 with the issue of railroad regulation as the focal point of the campaign. Hogg was elected Governor in the general election and the voters also approved an amendment to Article X, Section 2 of the Texas Constitution that empowered the Legislature to enact statutes creating regulatory agencies. These elections paved the way for the Legislature to enact on April 3, 1891 "An Act to Establish a Railroad Commission of the State of Texas," that later was placed in the Texas Revised Civil Statutes under article 6444 et seq. (House Bills 1, 3, and 58, 22nd Texas Legislature, Regular Session).
The Commission originally consisted of three members appointed by the Governor for three-year terms. Governor Hogg appointed the first three Commissioners in 1891 including John H. Reagan, who resigned as U.S. Senator from Texas to serve as the first Chairman. The Texas Constitution, Article XIX, Section 30 was amended in 1894 to provide for elective six-year overlapping terms for the Commissioners. That same year John H. Reagan was elected and served until his retirement in 1903.
The Texas Railroad Commission was the first regulatory agency created in the State of Texas and originally had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. The legal focus was on intrastate passenger and freight activities. Interstate jurisdiction fell under the U.S. Interstate Commerce Commission. For the first twenty-five years of its existence, the Railroad Commission was largely concerned with regulating railroads, setting rates, receiving complaints, and making investigations. As other controversies arose where the Legislature deemed that the public interest could best be served by regulation, additional duties were assigned to the Railroad Commission.
The Railroad Commission's authority was broadened beginning in 1917 with the passage of the Pipeline Petroleum Law (Senate Bill 68, 35th Legislature, Regular Session) that declared pipelines to be common carriers like railroads and placed them under the Commission's jurisdiction. This was the first act to designate the Railroad Commission as the agency to administer conservation laws relating to oil and gas. The Commission's regulatory and enforcement powers in oil and gas were increased by the Oil and Gas Conservation Law (Senate Bill 350 of the 36th Legislature, Regular Session), effective June 18, 1919. This act gave the Railroad Commission jurisdiction to regulate the production of oil and gas. Acting upon this legislation, the Commission adopted in 1919 the first statewide rules regulating the oil and gas industry to promote conservation and safety, including Rule 37. This rule requires minimum distances between wells at drilling sites in order to protect field pressure and correlative rights.
The Gas Utilities Act of 1920 (House Bill 11, 36th Legislature, 3rd Called Session) gave the Commission regulatory and rate authority over individuals and businesses producing, transporting, or distributing natural gas in Texas. In 1937, following a large natural gas explosion in a school in New London, Texas, the 45th Legislature passed legislation giving the Railroad Commission the authority to adopt rules and regulations pertaining to the odorization of natural gas or liquefied petroleum gases (House Bill 1017, Regular Session).
The passage of the Public Regulatory Act of 1975 (PURA) (House Bill 819, 64th Legislature, Regular Session) required certain state regulatory agencies, including the Commission, to set the overall revenues of a utility based on its "cost of service." Regulation of liquefied petroleum was added to the Commission's responsibilities in 1939 by the 46th Legislature (House Bill 792, Regular Session). The legislation authorized the Commission to adopt and enforce safety rules and standards in the storage, handling, transportation, and odorization of butane or LP-gases. Regulation of compressed natural gas was added to the Railroad Commission's responsibilities in 1983 (Senate Bill 617, 68th Legislature, Regular Session).
Railroad regulation was initially overseen by the Main Office, later the Main and Transportation Division, then the Transportation Division and finally the Rail Division. This division was responsible for checking equipment and track, railroad and signal operations, and hazardous material handling; conducting investigations of accidents and complaints concerning railroads; and securing federal funds to improve branch lines and preserve rail service to rural areas. The Division enforced rules aimed at removing obstructions on railroad rights-of-way and operated a crossing safety education program. In 2005, the Rail Division and its remaining function, rail safety regulation, were transferred to the Texas Department of Transportation (House Bill 2702, 79th Legislature, Regular Session). The Railroad Commission no longer has any railroad-related functions.
(Sources: Guide to Texas State Agencies, various editions; general laws and statutes; and the records themselves.)
The Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas in Texas. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. It oversees hazardous materials pipelines and natural gas pipelines and distribution systems as well as propane, butane, compressed natural gas, and liquefied natural gas. It works to make sure a continuous, safe supply of natural gas is available to Texas consumers at the lowest reasonable price. Additionally, the Commission regulates surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel, and conducts a program for reclaiming lands that were mined and abandoned before 1975.
The Railroad Commission of Texas had its origin in the demands of the shipping public in the late 1880s that insisted that railroads be subject to regulation based on public interest. An advocate for governmental regulation, Attorney General James Stephen Hogg ran for Governor in 1890 with the issue of railroad regulation as the focal point of the campaign. Hogg was elected Governor in the general election and the voters also approved an amendment to Article X, Section 2 of the Texas Constitution that empowered the Legislature to enact statutes creating regulatory agencies. These elections paved the way for the Legislature to enact on April 3, 1891 "An Act to Establish a Railroad Commission of the State of Texas," that later was placed in the Texas Revised Civil Statutes under article 6444 et seq. (House Bills 1, 3, and 58, 22nd Texas Legislature, Regular Session).
The Commission originally consisted of three members appointed by the Governor for three-year terms. Governor Hogg appointed the first three Commissioners in 1891 including John H. Reagan, who resigned as U.S. Senator from Texas to serve as the first Chairman. The Texas Constitution, Article XIX, Section 30 was amended in 1894 to provide for elective six-year overlapping terms for the Commissioners. That same year John H. Reagan was elected and served until his retirement in 1903.
The Texas Railroad Commission was the first regulatory agency created in the State of Texas and originally had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. The legal focus was on intrastate passenger and freight activities. Interstate jurisdiction fell under the U.S. Interstate Commerce Commission. For the first twenty-five years of its existence, the Railroad Commission was largely concerned with regulating railroads, setting rates, receiving complaints, and making investigations. As other controversies arose where the Legislature deemed that the public interest could best be served by regulation, additional duties were assigned to the Railroad Commission.
The Railroad Commission's authority was broadened beginning in 1917 with the passage of the Pipeline Petroleum Law (Senate Bill 68, 35th Legislature, Regular Session) that declared pipelines to be common carriers like railroads and placed them under the Commission's jurisdiction. This was the first act to designate the Railroad Commission as the agency to administer conservation laws relating to oil and gas. The Commission's regulatory and enforcement powers in oil and gas were increased by the Oil and Gas Conservation Law (Senate Bill 350 of the 36th Legislature, Regular Session), effective June 18, 1919. This act gave the Railroad Commission jurisdiction to regulate the production of oil and gas. Acting upon this legislation, the Commission adopted in 1919 the first statewide rules regulating the oil and gas industry to promote conservation and safety, including Rule 37. This rule requires minimum distances between wells at drilling sites in order to protect field pressure and correlative rights.
The Gas Utilities Act of 1920 (House Bill 11, 36th Legislature, 3rd Called Session) gave the Commission regulatory and rate authority over individuals and businesses producing, transporting, or distributing natural gas in Texas. In 1937, following a large natural gas explosion in a school in New London, Texas, the 45th Legislature passed legislation giving the Railroad Commission the authority to adopt rules and regulations pertaining to the odorization of natural gas or liquefied petroleum gases (House Bill 1017, Regular Session).
The passage of the Public Regulatory Act of 1975 (PURA) (House Bill 819, 64th Legislature, Regular Session) required certain state regulatory agencies, including the Commission, to set the overall revenues of a utility based on its "cost of service." Regulation of liquefied petroleum was added to the Commission's responsibilities in 1939 by the 46th Legislature (House Bill 792, Regular Session). The legislation authorized the Commission to adopt and enforce safety rules and standards in the storage, handling, transportation, and odorization of butane or LP-gases. Regulation of compressed natural gas was added to the Railroad Commission's responsibilities in 1983 (Senate Bill 617, 68th Legislature, Regular Session).
The Motor Bus Law of 1927, House Bill 50, 40th Legislature, Regular Session, and the Motor Carrier Law of 1929, House Bill 654, 41st Legislature, Regular Session, extended the Commission's regulatory powers to commercial transportation of persons and property on state highways. In 1995, following federal deregulation of motor carriers, the 74th Legislature eliminated the agency's authority to regulate commercial carriers involved in intrastate transport and transferred the remaining responsibilities related to commercial carriers (motor carrier registration, insurance verification, and safety) to the Texas Department of Transportation (Senate Bill 971, Regular Session), and the Department of Public Safety (Senate Bill 3, Regular Session).
The Texas Surface Mining and Reclamation Act of 1975, Senate Bill 55, 64th Legislature, Regular Session, authorized the Commission to regulate the exploration for and surface mining of coal, lignite, and uranium within the state and to oversee the reclamation of lands disturbed by surface mining operations. In 1991, the 72nd Legislature, Regular Session, passed House Bill 451, the Texas Aggregate Quarry and Pit Safety Act, that authorized the Commission to regulate quarry and pit operations.
Railroad regulation was initially overseen by the Main Office, later the Main and Transportation Division, then the Transportation Division and finally the Rail Division. This division was responsible for checking equipment and track, railroad and signal operations, and hazardous material handling; conducting investigations of accidents and complaints concerning railroads; and securing federal funds to improve branch lines and preserve rail service to rural areas. The Division enforced rules aimed at removing obstructions on railroad rights-of-way and operated a crossing safety education program. In 2005, the Rail Division and its remaining function, rail safety regulation, were transferred to the Texas Department of Transportation (House Bill 2702, 79th Legislature, Regular Session). The Railroad Commission no longer has any railroad-related functions.
(Sources: Guide to Texas State Agencies, various editions; general laws and statutes; the Railroad Commission website (http://www.rrc.state.tx.us/about/index.php), accessed on February 9, 2009; and the records themselves.)
The Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas in Texas. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. It oversees hazardous materials pipelines and natural gas pipelines and distribution systems as well as propane, butane, compressed natural gas, and liquefied natural gas. It works to make sure a continuous, safe supply of natural gas is available to Texas consumers at the lowest reasonable price. Additionally, the Commission regulates surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel, and conducts a program for reclaiming lands that were mined and abandoned before 1975.
The Arkansas-White-Red Basins Inter-Agency Committee was created in 1950 at the request of the President of the United States. Legislative basis for this committee was contained in the Flood Control Act of 1950, Public Law 516, 81st Congress. The Committee was made up of representatives from federal agencies concerned with water and related resource development and governors of the states involved. Each state had a work group composed of representatives from state agencies or similar bodies involved in the process. The Texas work group members were: Chief Engineer, Railroad Commission; Chairman, Texas Board of Water Development; Executive Secretary, Game and Fish Commission; State Health Officer; Director, Bureau of Economic Geology, University of Texas; Director, State Parks Board; Executive Director, State Soil Conservation Board; Director, Bureau of Business Research, University of Texas; and Vice Chancellor, Texas A&M University. The Committee conducted water and resource development studies. It produced an initial set of reports that were sent to the various federal and state work groups to solicit comments to accompany the report before it was submitted to Congress and the President. The comprehensive reports were published in 1955.
(Sources: Guide to Texas State Agencies, various editions; general laws and statutes; and the records themselves.)
Established by the legislature in 1891, the Railroad Commission of Texas originally managed the rates and operations of intrastate railroads, express companies, wharves, and terminals. By 1917, the agency also oversaw the transportation of petroleum pipelines and obtained jurisdiction over gas utilities three years later. During the 1930s, it became involved in political and economic issues, such as prorating the amount of oil wells could generate, thus conserving resources and managing the price of oil. Because of its role in petroleum production, the commission wielded a great deal of influence in both national and international industries until the decline of the Texas oil enterprise in the 1970s. Nonetheless, it still oversees a variety of operations that supervise and examine oil and gas production, while also regulating surface mining, among other activities.
Sources:
About the Agency. Railroad Commission of Texas. Accessed April 11, 2011. http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/mdr01 .
Prindle, David F. Railroad Commission. Handbook of Texas Online. Accessed April 11, 2011. http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/mdr01 .
Established by the legislature in 1891, the Railroad Commission of Texas originally managed the rates and operations of intrastate railroads, express companies, wharves, and terminals.
By 1917, the agency also oversaw the transportation of petroleum pipelines and obtained jurisdiction over gas utilities three years later. During the 1930s, it became involved in political and economic issues, such as prorating the amount of oil wells could generate, thus conserving resources and managing the price of oil. Because of its role in petroleum production, the commission wielded a great deal of influence in both national and international industries until the decline of the Texas oil enterprise in the 1970s. Nonetheless, it still oversees a variety of operations that supervise and examine oil and gas production, while also regulating surface mining, among other activities.
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http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/50099/50099-P.html
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<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/tslac/50059.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="610" source="lcnaf">Railroad Commission of Texas.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/50059/50059-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/50059/50059-P.html
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http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/houpub/00008/00008p2-P.html
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/houpub/00008/00008p2-P.html
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http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/houpub/00008/00008p3-P.html
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/houpub/00008/00008p3-P.html
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/utcah/01587.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="610">Railroad Commission of Texas.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/01587/01587-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/01587/01587-P.html
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23175472
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23175472
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/24263164
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/24263164
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/707926027
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/707926027
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http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/01629/01629-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/01629/01629-P.html
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/310570474
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/310570474
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http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/houpub/00008/00008p4-P.html
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/houpub/00008/00008p4-P.html
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/466407114
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/466407114
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http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/10222/10222-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/10222/10222-P.html
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/utcah/00158.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="610">Railroad Commission of Texas.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00158/00158-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00158/00158-P.html
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/244437402
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/244437402
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/466397397
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/466397397
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/777390343
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/777390343
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/tslac/20081.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="110">Railroad Commission of Texas.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20081/20081-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20081/20081-P.html
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/24862003
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/24862003
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http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/02555/02555-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/02555/02555-P.html
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/utcah/00078.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="610">Railroad Commission of Texas.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00078/00078-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00078/00078-P.html
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/746898862
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/746898862
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/317635331
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/317635331
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/33989299
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/33989299
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/310571931
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/310571931
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/317619678
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/317619678
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/utcah/02588.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="110">Railroad Commission of Texas</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/02588/02588-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/02588/02588-P.html
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/utcah/00148.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="610">Railroad Commission of Texas -- History.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00148/00148-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00148/00148-P.html
http://viaf.org/viaf/143060399
Citation
- Source
- http://viaf.org/viaf/143060399
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/726751936
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/726751936
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/320549398
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/320549398
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/tslac/20089.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="110" source="lcnaf">Railroad Commission of Texas.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20089/20089-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20089/20089-P.html
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/320554559
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/320554559
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/tslac/10221.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="110">Railroad Commission of Texas.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/10221/10221-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/10221/10221-P.html
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/utcah/00006.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="610" source="lcnaf">Railroad Commission of Texas.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00006/00006-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00006/00006-P.html
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/49053117
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/49053117
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/tslac/10225.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="110" source="lcnaf">Railroad Commission of Texas.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/10225/10225-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/10225/10225-P.html
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/18022214
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/18022214
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http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/01300/01300-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/01300/01300-P.html
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/237050764
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/237050764
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/145600676
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/145600676
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/25995501
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/25995501
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http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/50072/50072-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/50072/50072-P.html
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/tslac/40025.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="610" source="lcnaf">Railroad Commission of Texas.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/40025/40025-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/40025/40025-P.html
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/tslac/10232.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="110" source="lcnaf">Railroad Commission of Texas.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/10232/10232-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/10232/10232-P.html
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23285446
Citation
- Source
- http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23285446
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/tslac/20080.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="110">Railroad Commission of Texas.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20080/20080-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20080/20080-P.html
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/tslac/70014.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="610" source="lcnaf">Railroad Commission of Texas.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/70014/70014-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/70014/70014-P.html
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/utcah/00324.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="610">Railroad Commission of Texas</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00324/00324-P.html
Citation
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- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00324/00324-P.html
<objectXMLWrap> <container xmlns=""> <filename>/data/source/findingAids/taro/tslac/20053.xml</filename> <ead_entity en_type="corpname" encodinganalog="710" source="lcnaf">Texas State Railroad.</ead_entity> </container> </objectXMLWrap>
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20053/20053-P.html
Citation
- Source
- http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20053/20053-P.html
Tyler, George W., 1851-1927. Tyler, George W., papers, 1840-1926
Title:
Tyler, George W., papers, 1840-1926
Letters, diaries, notes, account papers, and research on Bell County comprise the George W. Tyler Papers (1840-1926), which document Tyler's activities as a lawyer, politician, local historian, regent for the University of Texas, and Free Mason.
ArchivalResource: 7 ft., 11 in.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/707926027 View
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- Resource Relation
- Tyler, George W., 1851-1927. Tyler, George W., papers, 1840-1926
Railroad Commision rate hearing #1573 transcripts and exhibits, 1914-1915
Title:
Railroad Commision rate hearing #1573 transcripts and exhibits 1914-1915
The Railroad Commission of Texas had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. These records consist of bound transcripts and exhibits (including photographs) of railroad rate hearings held by the Railroad Commission of Texas in 1915. The hearings were held to determine if a statewide increase in railroad shipping rates for freight was necessary. Testimony and evidence, dating 1914-1915, were presented by the railroads, shippers, and the Commission's staff.
ArchivalResource:
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- Resource Relation
- Railroad Commision rate hearing #1573 transcripts and exhibits, 1914-1915
Railroad Commission minutes, 1891-2004
Title:
Railroad Commission minutes 1891-2004
The Railroad Commission of Texas (RRC) initially had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. Today the Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas and surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. These minutes are the official record of the meetings of the Railroad Commission of Texas and document the actions and orders of the commissioners, covering the years 1891-2004. Matters before the Commission documented in the minutes include the establishment of and changes in railroad freight and passenger rates, train schedules, tariff classifications, requests to discontinue passenger stations, amendments to rules, complaints, and other railroad issues; contested oil and gas cases, complaints on violated Commission oil and gas rules (e.g. operator not in compliance with plugging rules), changes in policies and procedures, amendments to rules, resolution of complaints filed against the Commission, and other related matters concerning oil and gas regulation (production/permitting, oil field clean up, site remediation, compliance, etc.); issues concerning the operation of motor vehicles; gas utility regulation; liquefied petroleum gas and other gas services issues; regulation of pipelines; and surface mining and reclamation issues.
ArchivalResource:
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20089/20089-P.html View
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- Resource Relation
- Railroad Commission minutes, 1891-2004
Santa Fe Railroad Collection RG D 004., 1897-1968
Title:
Santa Fe Railroad Collection 1897-1968
Records of the Gulf, Colorado, and Santa Fe Railroad Company, 1897-1968. Part 2 of 7.
ArchivalResource:
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/houpub/00008/00008p2-P.html View
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- Resource Relation
- Santa Fe Railroad Collection RG D 004., 1897-1968
Parten, J. R. (Jubal Richard), 1896-1992. Parten, J. R., papers, 1890-1899, 1913-1992, 2009.
Title:
Parten, J. R., papers, 1890-1899, 1913-1992, 2009.
Collection documents Parten's professional and personal activities including his education at the University of Texas at Austin (1913-1917), his career as an independent oil man and founder of Woodley Petroleum Company and the Pan American Sulfur Company, his years as regent of the University of Texas at Austin (1935-1941), his service as head of the Transportation Division of the Petroleum Administration for War (1942-43), his service as chief of staff of the Allied War Reparations Commission (1945), his work in helping to establish the Petroleum Administration for Defense (1950), his service as a member of the governing boards of the Fund for the Republic and its successor the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions (1952-1976), his involvement as an activist and fund raiser for the national and Texas Democratic parties, and his support for a wide variety of civil liberties and peace movement organizations.
ArchivalResource: 184 ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/558984128 View
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- Resource Relation
- Parten, J. R. (Jubal Richard), 1896-1992. Parten, J. R., papers, 1890-1899, 1913-1992, 2009.
Isett, Frank E. Papers, 1838-1969.
Title:
Papers, 1838-1969.
Includes correspondence, financial and legal material, and office files pertaining to Isett's business activities in the oil and gas business. Collection bulks with financial documents, including oil and gas well receipts, and business files, including abstracts of title for Eastland County, Texas (1838-1958); reports and drilling logs (1920-1966); plats, maps, and tables (undated); and Texas Railroad Commission rulings and reports (1948-1969). Also included are personal files and correspondence concerning family matters.
ArchivalResource: 7,691 leaves
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/24263164 View
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- Resource Relation
- Isett, Frank E. Papers, 1838-1969.
Interagency Council on Natural Resources and the Environment records, 1969-1977
Title:
Interagency Council on NaturalResourcesand the Environment records 1969-1977
The Interagency Council onNatural Resources and the Environment, before 1972 known as the InteragencyNatural Resources Council, served tocoordinate the environmental stewardship of several state agencies andconsisted of the Texas Air ControlBoard, the Texas Industrial Commission, the Railroad Commission of Texas, theTexas HighwayDepartment, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, the Texas Soil and WaterConservationBoard, the Texas Water Quality Board, the Texas Water Rights Commission, and arepresentative of the Texas Governor's Office. Records are a 1969 programguidelinefor a comprehensivecoastal resources plan for the Texas gulf coast region; reports, 1970-1973, onTexas coastal zone resources includingwater, minerals, wildlife, health issues, waste management, the impact ofelectric power stations, transportation, tourism and recreation, and thecreation of a hydrologic data bank; and a 1977 final reportof the agency's Mitigation Committee concerning the minimization of negativeenvironmental impact by public and private development projects.
ArchivalResource: 0.2 cubicft.
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/70014/70014-P.html View
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- Resource Relation
- Interagency Council on Natural Resources and the Environment records, 1969-1977
Olin Wellborn Nichols Culberson Papers 73-120; 82-389; 90-373., 1860-1964
Title:
Olin Wellborn Nichols Culberson Papers 1860-1964
Olin Culberson was a Texas Railroad Commissioner known for championing the causes of independent oil producers.
ArchivalResource:
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/01305/01305-P.html View
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- Resource Relation
- Olin Wellborn Nichols Culberson Papers 73-120; 82-389; 90-373., 1860-1964
Reagan, John H. (John Henninger), 1818-1905. Reagan, John H., papers, 1847-1949.
Title:
Reagan, John H., papers, 1847-1949.
Correspondence, legal documents, financial records, literary productions, transcriptions of United States congressional records, and newspaper clippings document the business and political careers of John H. Reagan. Records of Black Range Mining District; Bullion Gold and Silver Company; Lockhart, Hopper Brothers and Company; Richard H. Hopper; and Asa Barnaby, all in Territory of New Mexico; and of Sierra Land and Cattle Company, of Territory of New Mexico and Kansas City, are included.
ArchivalResource: 2 ft., 3 in.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/26759038 View
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- Resource Relation
- Reagan, John H. (John Henninger), 1818-1905. Reagan, John H., papers, 1847-1949.
Railroad Commission of Texas. Railroad Commission docket book, 1891-1898.
Title:
Railroad Commission docket book, 1891-1898.
The Railroad Commission of Texas (RRC) had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. The records consist of a single docket book of the Railroad Commission of Texas with entries dating from 1891 to 1898. The book lists forty formal compaints concerning railroad service or tariffs filed in that period. The complaints are in chronological order and each one lists an assigned docket number, the date, the plaintiff and defendant, the nature of the complaint, and a brief statement on the outcome. The complaint was considered closed if a satisfactory explanation had been given by the railroad agency or if no further complaint was received. If a judgment was against the railroad or if no further action was to be taken by the Railroad Commission then a full description was given in the Commission's minutes. A cite from the docket book to the individual page in the minutes provides access to the description of the Railroad Commission's decision. After 1898, though the nature of the complaints remained the same, they became part of the minutes. This finding aid describes a single series of the Railroad Commission of Texas records. See Railroad Commission of Texas: An Overview of Records (http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20078/tsl-20078.html) for more records series.
ArchivalResource: 0.22 cubic ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/317635331 View
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- Railroad Commission of Texas. Railroad Commission docket book, 1891-1898.
Dorr, John J. Papers, 1914-1966, (bulks 1934-1966).
Title:
Papers, 1914-1966, (bulks 1934-1966).
Includes general farm and miscellaneous correspondence, papers on Dorr's oil leases, Railroad Commission reports, miscellaneous oil material, miscellaneous farm records and receipts, financial records and receipts, and a ledger and two letters concerned with the Dorr Cattle Company. Bulks with information concerning Dorr's agricultural and oil interests around Pecos, Texas.
ArchivalResource: 6 microfilm reels : negative
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/26082787 View
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- Resource Relation
- Dorr, John J. Papers, 1914-1966, (bulks 1934-1966).
Railroad Commission docket book, 1891-1898
Title:
Railroad Commission docket book, 1891-1898
ArchivalResource:
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/10221/10221-P.html View
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- Resource Relation
- Railroad Commission docket book, 1891-1898
Oscar Branch Colquitt Papers, 1873-1941.
Title:
Oscar Branch Colquitt Papers 1873-1941.
Texas state senator(1895-1899); Texas railroad commissioner (1903-1911); governor of Texas(1910-1915); U.S. Senate candidate (1916); member of the United States Board ofMediation (1929-1933); representative of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation(1935-1940). Newspaperman and lawyer. Papers concern Colquitt's career andpolitical activities and include correspondence, letterpresses, scrapbooks,speeches, photographs, reports, campaign materials, voting records, bills andresolutions, financial documents, reference files, and genealogical materialsabout the Burkhalter family.
ArchivalResource:
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- Resource Relation
- Oscar Branch Colquitt Papers, 1873-1941.
Santa Fe Railroad Collection RG D 004., 1897-1968
Title:
Santa Fe Railroad Collection 1897-1968
Records of the Gulf, Colorado, and Santa Fe Railroad Company, 1897-1968. Part 4 of 7.
ArchivalResource:
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/houpub/00008/00008p4-P.html View
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- Resource Relation
- Santa Fe Railroad Collection RG D 004., 1897-1968
Quanah, Acme, and Pacific Railway Company. Records, 1907-1923.
Title:
Records, 1907-1923.
Annual reports to the Railroad Commission of Texas and the Interstate Commerce Commission; correspondence regarding the annual reports; and three volumes of financial records.
ArchivalResource: 76 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/18022214 View
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- Resource Relation
- Quanah, Acme, and Pacific Railway Company. Records, 1907-1923.
Colquitt, Oscar Branch, 1861-1940. Colquitt, Oscar Branch, papers, 1873-1941.
Title:
Colquitt, Oscar Branch, papers, 1873-1941.
Papers concern Colquitt's career and political activities and include correspondence, letterpresses, scrapbooks, speeches, photographs, reports, campaign materials, voting records, bills and resolutions, financial documents, reference files, and genealogical materials about the Burkhalter family.
ArchivalResource: 45 ft. 6 in.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23175472 View
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- Resource Relation
- Colquitt, Oscar Branch, 1861-1940. Colquitt, Oscar Branch, papers, 1873-1941.
Records of Representative Fred M. Bosse, 1991, 1993, 1995-2002, undated, (bulk 1997-2000)
Title:
Records of Representative Fred M. Bosse, 1991, 1993, 1995-2002, undated, (bulk 1997-2000)
ArchivalResource:
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- Records of Representative Fred M. Bosse, 1991, 1993, 1995-2002, undated, (bulk 1997-2000)
Carole Keeton Rylander.
Title:
Carole Keeton Rylander. [1900]-
ArchivalResource: 1 vertical file folder ; 30 cm.
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- Carole Keeton Rylander.
Quanah, Acme, and Pacific Railway Company. Records, 1907-1923.
Title:
Records, 1907-1923.
Annual reports to the Railroad Commission of Texas and the Interstate Commerce Commission; correspondence regarding the annual reports; and three volumes of financial records.
ArchivalResource: 76 items.
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- Quanah, Acme, and Pacific Railway Company. Records, 1907-1923.
Prindle, David F. (David Forrest), 1948. Prindle, David F., oral history collection, circa 1978-1981.
Title:
Prindle, David F., oral history collection, circa 1978-1981.
Collection contains interview recordings in open reel and audiocassette formats conducted during the late 1970s and early 1980s as research for publications on the oil and gas industry, the Texas Railroad Commission, and other research interests.
ArchivalResource: 64 sound cassette tapes and 3 open reel tapes.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/237050764 View
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- Prindle, David F. (David Forrest), 1948. Prindle, David F., oral history collection, circa 1978-1981.
James Stephen Hogg Papers, 1836-1969
Title:
James Stephen Hogg Papers 1836-1969
James S. Hogg, lawyer,businessman and politician, was attorney general (1887-1890) and governor(1891-1895) of Texas. The papers relate to his political campaigns and career,including government reforms and regulation of industries, and development ofThe University of Texas and other educational institutions; Texas and UnitedStates politics, including Progressive and Populist movements; and genealogy,history, biography, and philanthropy of Hogg, his family, and hisheirs.
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- James Stephen Hogg Papers, 1836-1969
Reagan (John H. ) Papers 1932; 1942; 1945; 1950; 70-100; 88-344; 2006-030; 2007-078; 2009-262. 26759038., 1847-1949
Title:
Reagan (John H.) Papers 1847-1949
Correspondence, legal documents,financial records, literary productions, transcriptions of United Statescongressional records, and newspaper clippings comprise the John H. Reagan Papers,1847-1949, documenting Reagan’s political and business career.
ArchivalResource:
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- Reagan (John H. ) Papers 1932; 1942; 1945; 1950; 70-100; 88-344; 2006-030; 2007-078; 2009-262. 26759038., 1847-1949
Thompson (Ernest Othmer) Papers, 23285446., 1907-1967
Title:
Thompson (Ernest Othmer) Papers, 1907-1967
Correspondence, printed materials,speeches, memoranda, scrapbooks, maps, and photographs comprise the Ernest OthmerThompson Papers, 1907-1967, documenting Thompson's career, political activities, andhis military career.
ArchivalResource:
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- Thompson (Ernest Othmer) Papers, 23285446., 1907-1967
Railroad Commission of Texas. Railroad Commission records, 1836-1867, 1873-1885, 1890-2006, bulk 1891-1996.
Title:
Railroad Commission records, 1836-1867, 1873-1885, 1890-2006, bulk 1891-1996.
The Railroad Commission of Texas (RRC) initially had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. Today the Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas and surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. Records consist of minutes, correspondence, original orders, docket files, hearing files, reports, tariffs, oil and gas statistics, maps and plats, surveys, photographs, and other records. Dates covered are 1836-1867, 1873-1885, 1890-2006, the bulk dating 1891-1996. Files are present from most of the divisions of the Railroad Commission of Texas, including the old Main and Transportation Division, which eventually became the Rail Division; the Oil and Gas Division; and the Gas Services Division (formerly the Gas Utilities Division); the Surface Mining and Reclamation Division; as well as the Motor Transportation Division, now a part of the Texas Department of Transportation. Minutes are present for most of the agency's existence, detailing the regulatory and administrative actions of the commission. Annual reports of railroad companies and gas utility companies document the operations of these companies (railroads 1859-1867, 1873-1885, 1890-1996; gas utilities 1920-2001, 2004-2006) giving a good overview of the history of these types of operations and their oversight by the Railroad Commission. Correspondence, reports, and similar files, generally pre-1950, document rail and commercial motor vehicle regulation activities of the Commission and regulation of the oil and gas industry including early conservation efforts by the commission. Dockets, original orders, and hearing files show actions by Commissioners regarding changes in or establishment of rules and regulations, and such records, along with the minutes, reflect Commissioners' decisions in disputes or their approval or disapproval of requests for exceptions to various Railroad Commission regulations, such as the Rule 37 regulation, which governs the spacing between wells within an oil field. Correspondents include Commissioners and agency staff, railroad companies, oil and gas companies and operators, natural gas companies, commercial motor vehicle companies and operators, public utilities, businesses, state and federal officials and agencies, and the general public. Topics covered in these files include regulation and operation of railroads, including railroad companies' annual operations, rail company mergers, rail construction, and freight and passenger rates; oil and gas activities, including the issuance of orders governing drilling of oil and gas wells and the operation of the fields; oil and gas conservation and safety, including spacing of wells; disposal of oil and gas waste and pollution cleanup efforts; natural gas issues, include rate hearings, deregulation, and odorization of natural gas; reclamation of abandoned mine lands; and issuance of permits or certificates of convenience to operate commercial motor vehicles on public highways. Also present are the files of two early commissioners, Allison Mayfield (served 1897-1923) and Ernest O. Thompson (served 1933-1965). Mayfield's files consist of outgoing business and personal correspondence, including efforts to get reelected to the Commission in 1922. Thompson's files consist of correspondence, speeches, printed materials and other items which document his role as a Commission spokesman on oil and gas conservation. The records also include files, largely reports, from a joint federal-state committee, the Arkansas-White-Red River Basins Interagency Committee, formed to conduct water and resource development studies of the Arkansas, White, and Red River basins in the 1950s. The Railroad Commission?s scanned versions of the East Texas historical oil and gas hearing files are available online (http://www.rrc.state.tx.us/data/online/findingaid.php). The RRC plans to transfer the originals to the State Archives in the fall of 2011. This finding aid serves as an overview for the records of the Railroad Commission of Texas. Most series have their own detailed finding aids, partly due to the electronic file size limitations imposed by the online finding aid web site (TARO). A few series are unprocessed; most of these have a basic description of the records but no folder inventory.
ArchivalResource: 1228.05 cubic ft. 398 microfilm reels89.15 cubic ft. 6microfilm reels119 microfiche
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- Railroad Commission of Texas. Railroad Commission records, 1836-1867, 1873-1885, 1890-2006, bulk 1891-1996.
Railroad Commission of Texas. Texas Railroad Commission Records, 1903, 1935
Title:
Texas Railroad Commission Records, 1903, 1935
Comprising reports, the Texas Railroad Commission Records, 1903, 1935, document the agency's plans for development.
ArchivalResource: 1 in.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/746898862 View
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- Railroad Commission of Texas. Texas Railroad Commission Records, 1903, 1935
Transportation Division Interstate Commerce Commission finance dockets, 1920-1952
Title:
Transportation Division Interstate Commerce Commission finance dockets, 1920-1952
ArchivalResource:
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- Resource Relation
- Transportation Division Interstate Commerce Commission finance dockets, 1920-1952
Records, 1935-1936
Title:
Records, 1935-1936
ArchivalResource:
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- Records, 1935-1936
R. D. Parker Family Papers 72-31; 2000-074; 2002-104; 2002-149., 1924-1959
Title:
R. D. Parker FamilyPapers 1924-1959
Richard Denny Parker wasan early railroad builder and former chief of two divisions of the TexasRailroad Commission.
ArchivalResource:
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- R. D. Parker Family Papers 72-31; 2000-074; 2002-104; 2002-149., 1924-1959
Morehead, Richard. Morehead, Richard M., papers, 1903-1995.
Title:
Morehead, Richard M., papers, 1903-1995.
Correspondence, newspaper and magazine clippings, literary productions, reports, speeches, pamphlets, periodicals, books, photographs and programs comprise the papers of Morehead, Dallas Morning News reporter and columnist, and include newspaper clippings of articles by Morehead, classified research files of clippings and other printed material related to education, school integration, civil rights, race relations and Blacks in Texas and the South, primarily after the 1954 school desegregation ruling from the U. S. Supreme Court.
ArchivalResource: 51 ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/33989299 View
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- Morehead, Richard. Morehead, Richard M., papers, 1903-1995.
Railroad Commission records, 1836-1867, 1873-1885, 1890-2006, bulk 1891-1996
Title:
Railroad Commission records 1836-1867, 1873-1885, 1890-2006 bulk 1891-1996
The RailroadCommission of Texas (RRC) initially had jurisdiction over the rates andoperations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. Today theRailroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, andtransportation of oil and natural gas and surface mining for coal, uranium, andiron ore gravel. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's naturalresources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, toprevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide.Records consist of minutes, correspondence, original orders, docket files,hearing files, reports, tariffs, oil and gas statistics, maps and plats,surveys, photographs, and other records. Dates covered are 1836-1867,1873-1885, 1890-2006, the bulk dating 1891-1996. Files are present from most ofthe divisions of the Railroad Commission of Texas, including the old Main andTransportation Division, which eventually became the Rail Division; the Oil andGas Division; and the Gas Services Division (formerly the Gas UtilitiesDivision); the Surface Mining and Reclamation Division; and the MotorTransportation Division, now a part of the Texas Department of Transportation.Topics covered in these files include regulation and operation of railroads,including railroad companies annual operations, rail company mergers, railconstruction, and freight and passenger rates; oil and gas activities,including the issuance of orders governing the drilling of oil and gas wellsand the operation of the fields; oil and gas conservation and safety, includingspacing of wells; disposal of oil and gas waste and pollution cleanup efforts;natural gas issues, include rate hearings, deregulation, and odorization ofnatural gas; reclamation of abandoned mine lands; and issuance of permits orcertificates of convenience to operate commercial motor vehicles on publichighways.
ArchivalResource:
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- Railroad Commission records, 1836-1867, 1873-1885, 1890-2006, bulk 1891-1996
Culberson, Olin Wellborn Nichols 1886-1961. Olin Wellborn Nichols Culberson, papers, 1860-1964.
Title:
Olin Wellborn Nichols Culberson, papers, 1860-1964.
Papers document the career of Culberson (1886-1961) as a member of the Texas Railroad Commission from 1940-1961, his interest in the regulation of the oil and gas industries by the state rather than the federal government, and the elimination of discriminatory freight rates against southwestern Texas.
ArchivalResource: 10 ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/466407114 View
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- Culberson, Olin Wellborn Nichols 1886-1961. Olin Wellborn Nichols Culberson, papers, 1860-1964.
Railroad Commission of Texas. Railroad Commission of Texas interlocking towers records, 1902-1974.
Title:
Railroad Commission of Texas interlocking towers records, 1902-1974.
This collection contains correspondence, blueprints, and technical information on the interlocking railroad towers built under the Railroad Commission of Texas from about 1900 until 1966. The purpose of the towers was to ensure safe passage of trains over intersecting railroad lines, or trains which switched from one line to another. Each tower was assigned a number; the records in this collection have been arranged in numerical order.
ArchivalResource: 6 boxes (6 linear feet)
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- Railroad Commission of Texas. Railroad Commission of Texas interlocking towers records, 1902-1974.
Hogg, James Stephen, 1851-1906. Hogg, James Stephen, papers, 1836-1969.
Title:
Hogg, James Stephen, papers, 1836-1969.
Papers relate to genealogy, history, and biography of Hogg and members of his family; to his career; to Progressivism in Texas including antitrust legislation during and after Hogg's gubernatorial administrations, the "Hogg Laws," municipal reforms, tax reform, control of lobbying, regulation of the oil and gas industry and of the insurance industry, securities regulation, railroad regulation and the establishment of the Texas Railroad Commission; to other aspects of Hogg's gubernatorial administrations including interest in and development of The University of Texas and other state educational institutions and the promotion of state historical and archival facilities and resources; to other gubernatorial administrations; to the Democratic Party in Texas and the United States (1876-1906), the political influence of Texas Confederate veteran groups, and the history of Populism in Texas; to political campaigns for offices of attorney general of Texas, governor of Texas, U.S. congressman, U.S. senator, and U.S. president, especially the presidential campaigns of William Jennings Bryan (1896 and 1900); to political patronage, preferment, appointments, applications, recommendations, and endorsements, influence and spoils; to the political careers of prominent Texans; to political issues in Texas and the U.S.; to the philanthropic concerns of Hogg and his heirs.
ArchivalResource: 37 ft., 2 in.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23284616 View
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- Hogg, James Stephen, 1851-1906. Hogg, James Stephen, papers, 1836-1969.
Railroad Commission Arkansas-White-Red Basins Inter-Agency Committee records, 1954-1956, bulk 1955
Title:
Railroad Commission Arkansas-White-Red Basins Inter-Agency Committee records 1954-1956 bulk 1955
The Arkansas-White-Red Basins Inter-Agency Committee was created in 1950 at the request of the President of the United States to conduct water and resource development studies under the auspices of the federal Flood Control Act of 1950. The chief engineer of the Railroad Commission was a committee member. These are reports, drafts, collection data, and correspondence on water and other resources in the Arkansas, White, and Red River Basins, dating 1954-1956, bulk 1955. The river basins cover areas in Arkansas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, New Mexico, and Texas. The reports in this series were produced by the Arkansas-White-Red Basins Inter-Agency Committee. The bulk of the materials consist of the published reports. A small amount of correspondence accompanies the reports, consisting of memoranda to work group members from John J. Ledbetter, who served as Governor Allan Shivers' representative on the Arkansas-White-Red Basins Inter-Agency Committee. Topics covered in the reports include mosquito control, oil and gas by-products, and water resources.
ArchivalResource:
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- Railroad Commission Arkansas-White-Red Basins Inter-Agency Committee records, 1954-1956, bulk 1955
Records, 1889-1894, undated
Title:
Records 1889-1894, undated
Types of records are correspondence, reports from state officials, messages, proclamations, petitions, lists of appointees, clippings, and transcripts, dating from 1889 to 1894 and undated. Records are of James Stephen Hogg's terms as governor of Texas.
ArchivalResource:
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- Records, 1889-1894, undated
Santa Fe Railroad Collection RG D 004., 1897-1968
Title:
Santa Fe Railroad Collection 1897-1968
Records of the Gulf, Colorado, and Santa Fe Railroad Company, 1897-1968. Part 3 of 7.
ArchivalResource:
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- Santa Fe Railroad Collection RG D 004., 1897-1968
Transportation Division Interstate Commerce Commission valuation reports, 1926-1927
Title:
Transportation Division Interstate Commerce Commission valuation reports 1926-1927
The Railroad Commission of Texas (RRC) had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. The Railroad Commission, at the request of the federal Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC), would often hear cases for the ICC (or jointly with the ICC) involving applications for certificates of public convenience and necessity and would recommend to the ICC whether or not to grant the application. The Railroad Commission interaction with the ICC was through the Main Office (later Main Office and Rate Division, then Main Office and Transportation Division, then the Transportation Division). These records are detailed construction valuation reports of two railroad branch lines built by the Panhandle and Santa Fe Railroad in 1926 and 1927. One line was from Panhandle, Texas to Borger, Texas and the other from White Deer, Texas to Skellyton, Texas.
ArchivalResource:
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- Transportation Division Interstate Commerce Commission valuation reports, 1926-1927
Railroad Commission commissioners' records, 1898-1901, 1906-1908, 1916, 1920-1966, bulk about 1930-about 1960
Title:
Railroad Commission commissioners' records, 1898-1901, 1906-1908, 1916, 1920-1966, bulk about 1930-about 1960
ArchivalResource:
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- Railroad Commission commissioners' records, 1898-1901, 1906-1908, 1916, 1920-1966, bulk about 1930-about 1960
Tyler, George W. Papers 73-164., 1840-1926
Title:
Tyler, George W. Papers 1840-1926
Letters, diaries, notes, accountpapers, and research on Bell County comprise the George W. Tyler Papers (1840-1926),which document Tyler’s activities as a lawyer, politician, local historian, regentfor the University of Texas, and Free Mason.
ArchivalResource:
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- Tyler, George W. Papers 73-164., 1840-1926
Parker, Richard Denny. Parker, R. D. Parker Family, papers, 1924-1959.
Title:
Parker, R. D. Parker Family, papers, 1924-1959.
The papers relate to the Parker family history and Richard Denny Parker's career and the oil business, particularly technical aspects of oil production during the 1930s and 1940s. The records also relate to the operation of the Parker Jersey Farm in Groesbeck, Texas and to various legal and financial interests of R. D. Parker in Austin and throughout Texas. The family-related portion of the papers include R. D. Parker's genealogical research; correspondence from the Parker, Clement and Connell families of Travis and Milam counties from the 1890s through 1940s; and Nona Clement's class notes from her tenure at the University of Texas.
ArchivalResource: 14 ft. 8 in.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/466397397 View
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- Parker, Richard Denny. Parker, R. D. Parker Family, papers, 1924-1959.
Railroad Commission of Texas. Railroad Commission doubleheader hearing, about 1900.
Title:
Railroad Commission doubleheader hearing, about 1900.
The Railroad Commission of Texas (RRC) had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. This series consists of the transcript of a hearing, about 1900, before the Railroad Commission of Texas. The hearing concerned the use of "doubleheaders," which is the running of a train with two engines, on Texas railroads and focused on the safety issues of such a practice. Railroad employees objected to the use and were especially concerned over the safety of the crew in the second engine. Railroad companies defended the practice, citing the use of doubleheaders on many railroads outside Texas, denying that safety problems were any greater than on single engine trains, and pointing to the greater pulling power and increased efficiency of larger trains. This was a formal hearing before the Railroad Commission with Chairman John H. Reagan (1891-1903) presiding. The typed transcript is over 500 pages long and consists entirely of witness testimony. The witnesses were sworn in and responded to questions under both direct and cross examination. The many witnesses included engineers, brakemen, conductors, officials of railroad unions, freight agents, and general superintendents and other officers of railroad companies. Pages are missing from both the beginning and the end of the typed transcript. There is no formal title page, conclusion, or date. An inventory of the records was conducted to provide a brief description of the contents of each box including the dates and types of materials and a notation of any filing arrangement that may be present. This finding aid describes one series of the Railroad Commission of Texas records. See Railroad Commission of Texas: An Overview of Records (http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20078/tsl-20078.html) for more records series.
ArchivalResource: 0.47 cubic ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/317630901 View
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- Railroad Commission of Texas. Railroad Commission doubleheader hearing, about 1900.
Hardeman, Dorsey B. Papers, 1800-1973.
Title:
Papers, 1800-1973.
Consists of scrapbooks containing correspondence, newsclippings, printed speeches and addresses, photographs, manuscripts and programs relating to Dorsey's political career in the Texas Senate and his appointment to the Texas Water Rights Commission chairmanship. Also clippings and speeches pertaining to Hardeman's two-year tenure as mayor of San Angelo and copies of addresses by Daniel Webster, Sam Houston and Pat Neff.
ArchivalResource: 6 microfilm reels : negative
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- Hardeman, Dorsey B. Papers, 1800-1973.
Richard M. Morehead Papers, 1903, 1922-1995
Title:
Richard M. Morehead Papers 1903, 1922-1995
Correspondence, newspaper and magazineclippings, literary productions, reports, speeches, pamphlets, periodicals, books,photographs and programs comprise the Richard M. Morehead Papers, 1903, 1922-1995,documenting his personal and professional life.
ArchivalResource: 51 ft.
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00294/00294-P.html View
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- Richard M. Morehead Papers, 1903, 1922-1995
Thompson, Ernest Othmer, 1892-1966. Thompson, Ernest Othmer, papers, 1907-1967.
Title:
Thompson, Ernest Othmer, papers, 1907-1967.
Papers document Thompson's career and political activities, and also pertain to his military career in World War I and World War II as well as to his service in the Texas National Guard. They contain correspondence, official reports, statements, hearings, briefs and testimonies, printed and recorded speeches, scrapbooks, notes, photographs, maps, certificates and awards, campaign literature, books, newspaper clippings, and other printed materials, as well as memorabilia related to Thompson's first wife, May Peterson, a Metropolitan Opera singer. Included is a series of 39 bound volumes with index that documents Thompson's professional activities from 1930 through 1957 and contains speeches, memoranda, letters and telegrams, statements, resolutions, and other material.
ArchivalResource: 41 ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/23285446 View
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- Thompson, Ernest Othmer, 1892-1966. Thompson, Ernest Othmer, papers, 1907-1967.
Railroad Commission doubleheader hearing, about 1900
Title:
Railroad Commission doubleheader hearing about 1900
The Railroad Commission of Texas (RRC) had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. These records consist of a transcript of a Railroad Commission of Texas hearing, about 1900, held to consider the safety of i.e., the running of a train with two engines. Railroad employees and union officials objected to doubleheaders on the grounds of safety while railroad officials defended the use. The transcript is over 500 pages and consists entirely of witness testimony. There is no title page, conclusion, or date. doubleheaders,
ArchivalResource:
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- Railroad Commission doubleheader hearing, about 1900
J. R. Parten Papers 90-208; 90-285; 97-044; 98-290; 98-325; 2009-317; 2011-106., 1890-1899, 1913-1992, 2009
Title:
J.R. Parten Papers 1890-1899, 1913-1992, 2009
The Parten Papers document the lifeand career of J. R. Parten, Texas oil and sulphur industries entrepreneur, rancher,University of Texas regent and supporter, federal government official, DemocraticParty leader and financier, civil libertarian, and anti-Vietnam War and anti-nuclearwar activist.
ArchivalResource: 184ft.
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/00324/00324-P.html View
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- J. R. Parten Papers 90-208; 90-285; 97-044; 98-290; 98-325; 2009-317; 2011-106., 1890-1899, 1913-1992, 2009
Railroad Commission of Texas. Arkansas-White-Red River Basins Inter-Agency records, 1954-1956 bulk 1955
Title:
Arkansas-White-Red River Basins Inter-Agency records, 1954-1956 bulk 1955
The Arkansas-White-Red Basins Inter-Agency Committee was created in 1950 at the request of the President of the United States to conduct water and resource development studies under the auspices of the federal Flood Control Act of 1950. The chief engineer of the Railroad Commission was a committee member. These are reports, drafts, collection data, and correspondence on water and other resources in the Arkansas, White, and Red River Basins, dating 1954-1956, bulk 1955. The river basins cover areas in Arkansas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, New Mexico, and Texas. The reports in this series were produced by the Arkansas-White-Red Basins Inter-Agency Committee. The bulk of the materials consist of the published reports. A small amount of correspondence accompanies the reports, consisting of memorandum to work group members from John J. Ledbetter, who served as Governor Allan Shivers' representative on the Arkansas-White-Red Basins Inter-Agency Committee. Topics covered in the reports include mosquito control, oil and gas by-products, and water resources. Elements in the reports include descriptive data, summaries of research and data gathered, cost analysis, recommendations for programs to initiate, and maps. The title of this set of reports is "Arkansas-White-Red River Basins : A Report on the Conservation and Development of the Water and Land Resources,"23 volumes. Some preliminary reports and drafts of the Committee not found in this series can be found in the federal Documents Collection of the Library and Archives Commission or in the library at the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ). Titles of all the reports produced by the Inter-Agency Committee are unknown. Minutes of the Inter-Agency Committee from 1955 to 1959 can be found in the federal Documents Collection. Transcripts of public hearings of the committee in 1950 are in the library at TCEQ. To prepare this inventory, the described materials were cursorily reviewed to delineate series, to confirm the accuracy of contents lists, to provide an estimate of dates covered, and to determine record types. This finding aid describes one series of the Railroad Commission of Texas records. See Railroad Commission of Texas: An Overview of Records (http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20078/tsl-20078.html) for more records series.
ArchivalResource: 2 cubic ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/320551070 View
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- Railroad Commission of Texas. Arkansas-White-Red River Basins Inter-Agency records, 1954-1956 bulk 1955
Pellusch, Jana. Pellusch, Jana Papers, 1952-1992
Title:
Pellusch, Jana Papers, 1952-1992
The papers of Jana Pellusch, born 1950, member of the Young Socialist Alliance and the Oil, Chemical, and Atomic Workers union, activist and author, include newspaper clippings, printed material, serials, letters, audio cassettes, quasi-publications, and writings, and relate to her involvements in organizations and unions.
ArchivalResource: 7 ft.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/777390343 View
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- Pellusch, Jana. Pellusch, Jana Papers, 1952-1992
Parker, Daniel, Family. Parker, Daniel, Papers, 1836-1890, 1910-1953
Title:
Parker, Daniel, Papers, 1836-1890, 1910-1953
The Daniel Parker Family Papers document the family's history from 1836 to 1953, mostly through correspondence.
ArchivalResource: 1 ft. 9 in.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/726751936 View
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- Parker, Daniel, Family. Parker, Daniel, Papers, 1836-1890, 1910-1953
Flewellen, L. H. Papers, 1875-1944, 1913-1944.
Title:
Papers, 1875-1944, 1913-1944.
Bulks with correspondence, financial documents, legal material, printed material, and scrapbook material relating mainly to Flewellen's legal practice and other activities. Included are items concerning the Home Owners' Loan Corporation, Ranger during its peak years, state and area politics, and the Texas Railroad Commission.
ArchivalResource: 26, 603 leaves.
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- Resource Relation
- Flewellen, L. H. Papers, 1875-1944, 1913-1944.
Santa Fe Railroad Collection RG D 004., 1897-1968
Title:
Santa Fe Railroad Collection 1897-1968
Records of the Gulf, Colorado, and Santa Fe Railroad Company, 1897-1968. Part 1 of 7.
ArchivalResource:
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Santa Fe Railroad Collection RG D 004., 1897-1968
Parker, Daniel, Papers 67-105; 2006-004., 1836-1890, 1910-1953
Title:
Parker, Daniel, Papers 1836-1890, 1910-1953
The Daniel Parker Family Papers document the family's history from 1836 to 1953, mostly through correspondence.
ArchivalResource:
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/02555/02555-P.html View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Parker, Daniel, Papers 67-105; 2006-004., 1836-1890, 1910-1953
Pellusch, Jana Papers 94-242; 96-032., 1952-1992
Title:
Pellusch, Jana Papers 1952-1992
The papers of Jana Pellusch, born1950, member of the Young Socialist Alliance and the Oil, Chemical, and AtomicWorkers union, activist and author, include newspaper clippings, printed material,serials, letters, audio cassettes, quasi-publications, and writings, and relate toher involvements in organizations and unions.
ArchivalResource:
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Pellusch, Jana Papers 94-242; 96-032., 1952-1992
Railroad Commission of Texas. Railroad Commission press releases and miscellaneous records, 1952-1983, 1985-2004.
Title:
Railroad Commission press releases and miscellaneous records, 1952-1983, 1985-2004.
The Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas and surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. The records are news or press releases, announcements of seminars or workshops, statements, laws, maps, etc., dating 1952-1983, 1985-2004. These items are prepared by the Public Information Office of the Railroad Commission of Texas at the request of an individual commissioner or prepared in the commissioner's office and released upon the instruction of the Commission. The releases are used to inform the media and public about Commission policies, hearings, decisions, actions, and programs. These materials cover the full range of commission activities, with most concerning the oil and gas industry. Issues covered include rail activities, oil and gas regulation, environmental concerns, motor transportation, natural gas safety and natural gas pipelines, surface mining and reclamation issues (primarily coal mining), and the use of alternative fuels. The releases for 1952-1983 and 1985-1991 are bound. There are loose, or unbound releases from 1983 and 1986-2004. And, press releases from 1985 to 1999 can also be found on microfiche. Following the releases are a few items filed with the releases but not in the chronological sequence - oil and gas production reports, maps, and laws. Press releases beginning in 2007 can be found on the website of the agency at http://www.rrc.state.tx.us/pressreleases/index.php. This finding aid describes a single series of the Railroad Commission of Texas records. See Railroad Commission of Texas: An Overview of Records (http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20078/tsl-20078.html) for more records series.
ArchivalResource: 2.25 cubic ft.
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Railroad Commission of Texas. Railroad Commission press releases and miscellaneous records, 1952-1983, 1985-2004.
Committee files of Representative Mike Jackson, 1995
Title:
Committee files of Representative Mike Jackson, 1995
ArchivalResource:
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/50072/50072-P.html View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Committee files of Representative Mike Jackson, 1995
Texas Railroad Commission Records 93-470., 1903, 1935
Title:
Texas Railroad Commission Records 1903, 1935
Comprising reports, the Texas Railroad Commission Records, 1903, 1935, document the agency’s plans for development.
ArchivalResource:
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Texas Railroad Commission Records 93-470., 1903, 1935
Government -- Railroad Commission.
Title:
Government -- Railroad Commission.
ArchivalResource: 1 file folder.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/310571931 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Government -- Railroad Commission.
Railroad Commission of Texas. Railroad Commission minutes, 1891-2004.
Title:
Railroad Commission minutes, 1891-2004.
The Railroad Commission of Texas (RRC) initially had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. Today the Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas and surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. These minutes are the official record of the meetings of the Railroad Commission of Texas and document the actions and orders of the commissioners, covering the years 1891-2004. Other items include notices of hearings, orders, circulars, and special notices. Matters before the Commission documented in the minutes include the establishment of and changes in railroad freight and passenger rates, train schedules, tariff classifications, requests to discontinue passenger stations, amendments to rules, complaints, and other railroad issues; contested oil and gas cases, complaints on violated Commission oil and gas rules (e.g. operator not in compliance with plugging rules), changes in policies and procedures, amendments to rules, resolution of complaints filed against the Commission, and other related matters concerning oil and gas regulation (production/permitting, oil field clean up, site remediation, compliance, etc.); issues concerning the operation of motor vehicles; gas utility regulation; liquefied petroleum gas and other gas services issues; regulation of pipelines; and surface mining and reclamation issues. Minutes from 1891 to the end of the 1910s are primarily concerned with railroad rates and regulations. Beginning in 1917 with pipeline regulation, the minutes begin to record the Commission's activities in other areas. The establishment of the Oil and Gas Division, the Gas Utilities (later Gas Services) Division, and the Motor Transportation Division expanded greatly the Commission's jurisdiction and the minutes reflect these changes. The activities of the divisions added large dockets of cases, hearings and orders to the minutes. These divisions came to dominate the meetings of the Commission and the minutes as railroad regulation decreased and other areas of regulation became more complex. Topics covered in the minutes include regulation and operation of railroads, including railroad companies' annual operations, rail construction, and setting freight and passenger rates; oil and gas activities, including the issuance of orders governing drilling of oil and gas wells and the operation of the fields; oil and gas conservation and safety, including spacing of wells; disposal of oil and gas waste and pollution cleanup efforts; natural gas issues, include rate hearings, deregulation, and odorization of natural gas; and issuance of permits or certificates of convenience to operate commercial motor vehicles on public highways. The minutes from 1891 to 1972 are in bound volumes and from 1973 to 2004 on microfilm. During the microfilming process Reel 81 was skipped. The microfilm through 1996 exists only as master negatives and is stored offsite, so paper use copies of the minutes have been retained for 1979-1995. The microfilm reels for 1997-2004 are use copies stored at the Archives building and are available for research use. Each of the pre-1920 volumes of minutes have a brief subject index in the front of the volume. The post-1920 volumes, the microfilm, and the paper sets of minutes do not have indexes. Orders, circulars and other attachments are only found in the microfilm copies of the minutes. Agendas and minutes from 1998 to the present are posted on the Railroad Commission's website, see http://www.rrc.state.tx.us/meetings/conferences/index.php. This finding aid describes a single series of the Railroad Commission of Texas records. See Railroad Commission of Texas: An Overview of Records (http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20078/tsl-20078.html) for more records series.
ArchivalResource: 20.85 cubic ft.150 reels
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- Resource Relation
- Railroad Commission of Texas. Railroad Commission minutes, 1891-2004.
Railroad Commission of Texas. Railroad Commission commissioners' records, 1898-1901, 1906-1908, 1916, 1920-1966 bulk about 1930-about 1960.
Title:
Railroad Commission commissioners' records, 1898-1901, 1906-1908, 1916, 1920-1966 bulk about 1930-about 1960.
The Railroad Commission of Texas (RRC) initially had jurisdiction over the rates and operations of railroads, terminals, wharves and express companies. Today the Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas and surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel. The records include correspondence, speeches, press releases, newspaper clippings, magazine articles and reprints, and pamphlets of two commissioners of the Railroad Commission of Texas. The records date 1898-1901, 1906-1908, 1916, 1920-1966, bulk about 1930-about 1960. The records of Allison Mayfield (1860-1923) consist of four letterpress copybooks of outgoing correspondence. Most of the letters in the first two volumes are personal family or business correspondence and date 1898-1901, 1906-1908. The third and fourth volumes concentrate on Mayfield's reelection efforts to the Railroad Commission in 1898, 1916 and 1922. The records of Texas Railroad Commissioner Ernest O. Thompson (1892-1966) include correspondence, speeches, press releases, newspaper clippings, magazine articles and reprints, and pamphlets that especially document his role as Commission spokesperson on oil and gas conservation. The records cover the period 1920-1966, bulk about 1930-about 1960. This finding aid describes a single series of the Railroad Commission of Texas records. See Railroad Commission of Texas: An Overview of Records (http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20078/tsl-20078.html) for more records series.
ArchivalResource: 10.3 cubic ft.
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Railroad Commission of Texas. Railroad Commission commissioners' records, 1898-1901, 1906-1908, 1916, 1920-1966 bulk about 1930-about 1960.
Biography -- Thompson, Ernest O.
Title:
Biography -- Thompson, Ernest O.
ArchivalResource: 1 file folder.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/310570474 View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Biography -- Thompson, Ernest O.
Railroad Commission press releases and miscellaneous records, 1952-1983, 1985-2004
Title:
Railroad Commission press releases and miscellaneous records 1952-1983, 1985-2004
The Railroad Commission of Texas regulates the exploration, production, and transportation of oil and natural gas and surface mining for coal, uranium, and iron ore gravel. Its statutory role is to prevent waste of the state's natural resources, to protect the correlative rights of different interest owners, to prevent pollution, and to provide safety in matters such as hydrogen sulfide. The records are news or press releases, other materials present include statements, laws, and maps, dating 1952-1983, 1985-2004. These items are prepared by the Public Information Office of the Railroad Commission of Texas at the request of an individual commissioner or prepared in the commissioner's office and released upon the instruction of the Commission. The releases are used to inform the media and public about Commission policies, decisions, actions, and programs. Issues covered include rail activities, oil and gas regulation, environmental concerns, natural gas safety and natural gas pipelines, surface mining and reclamation issues (primarily coal mining), and the use of alternative fuels.
ArchivalResource:
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/tslac/20067/20067-P.html View
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Railroad Commission press releases and miscellaneous records, 1952-1983, 1985-2004
Records, 1901-1907
Title:
Records 1901-1907
Types of records are correspondence, reports, telegrams, petitions, opinions of the Attorney General and the Railroad Commission, proclamations, lists, letterpress books, bill analyses, and financial records dating from 1901 to 1907. Documents are records of Samuel W.T. Lanham's terms as governor of Texas. Much correspondence relates to pardons, rewards, extraditions, and requisitions, as well as requests and recommendations for appointment to office.
ArchivalResource:
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Records, 1901-1907
Records relating to the Penitentiary, 1846-1921, undated
Title:
Records relating to the Penitentiary, 1846-1921, undated
ArchivalResource:
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Citation
- Resource Relation
- Records relating to the Penitentiary, 1846-1921, undated
Arkansas-White-Red Basins Inter-Agency Committee.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w69h0c27
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Arkansas-White-Red Basins Inter-Agency Committee.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Colquitt, Oscar Branch
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Culberson, Olin Wellborn Nichols
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Culberson, Olin Wellborn Nichols 1886-1961.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Dorr, John J.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Flewellen, L. H.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hardeman, Dorsey B.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Hogg, James Stephen, 1851-1906
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Isett, Frank E.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Mayfield, Allison, 1860-1923
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Morehead, Richard.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Morehead, Richard M., 1913-2003
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Panhandle and Santa Fe Railway Company.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Parker, Daniel, Family
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Parker, Daniel, Family
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Parker, Richard Denny
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Parker, Richard Denny.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Parten, J. R. (Jubal Richard)
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Parten, J. R. (Jubal Richard), 1896-1992.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Pellusch, Jana
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Pellusch, Jana
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Prindle, David F. (David Forrest), 1948.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Quanah, Acme, and Pacific Railway Company.
Railroad Commission of Texas. Gas Services Division.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6rn94zt
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Railroad Commission of Texas. Gas Services Division.
Railroad Commission of Texas. Gas Utilities Division.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6tx9bj9
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Railroad Commission of Texas. Gas Utilities Division.
Railroad Commission of Texas. Main Office and Transportation Division.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6kh6jnp
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Railroad Commission of Texas. Main Office and Transportation Division.
Railroad Commission of Texas. Main Office Division.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6kf8fbg
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Railroad Commission of Texas. Main Office Division.
Railroad Commission of Texas. Motor Transportation Division.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6xd6z40
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Railroad Commission of Texas. Motor Transportation Division.
Railroad Commission of Texas. Oil and Gas Division.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6v75g14
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Railroad Commission of Texas. Oil and Gas Division.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Railroad Commission of Texas. Rail Division.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Railroad Commission of Texas. Rail Division.
Railroad Commission of Texas. Surface Mining and Reclamation Division.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6m67gcv
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Railroad Commission of Texas. Surface Mining and Reclamation Division.
Railroad Commission of Texas. Transportation Division.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6sv3m6v
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Railroad Commission of Texas. Transportation Division.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Reagan, John H. (John Henninger), 1818-1905
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Santa Fe Railroad
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Santa Fe Railroad
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Santa Fe Railroad
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Santa Fe Railroad
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Texas. Governor (1891-1895 : Hogg)
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Texas. Governor (1903-1907: Lanham)
Texas. Interagency Council on Natural Resources and the Environment.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6tc7qcb
View
associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Texas. Interagency Council on Natural Resources and the Environment.
Texas. Legislature. House of Representatives.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6089xks
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Texas. Legislature. House of Representatives.
Texas. Legislature. Senate. Investigation Committee Appointed by Virtue of Senate Simple Resolution No. 96.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w60t65t6
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Texas. Legislature. Senate. Investigation Committee Appointed by Virtue of Senate Simple Resolution No. 96.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Thompson, Ernest O.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Thompson, Ernest O.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Thompson, Ernest Othmer, 1892-1966.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Transportation Division.
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- Tyler, George W.
United States. Interstate Commerce Commission.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6t47j8h
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associatedWith
Citation
- Constellation Relation
- United States. Interstate Commerce Commission.
Commercial vehicles
Citation
- Subject
- Commercial vehicles
Commercial vehicles
Citation
- Subject
- Commercial vehicles
Conservation of natural resources
Citation
- Subject
- Conservation of natural resources
Conservation of natural resources
Citation
- Subject
- Conservation of natural resources
Conservation of natural resources
Citation
- Subject
- Conservation of natural resources
Freight and freightage
Citation
- Subject
- Freight and freightage
Freight and freightage
Citation
- Subject
- Freight and freightage
Gas companies
Citation
- Subject
- Gas companies
Gas companies
Citation
- Subject
- Gas companies
Gas companies
Citation
- Subject
- Gas companies
Gascompanies
Citation
- Subject
- Gascompanies
Gas industry
Citation
- Subject
- Gas industry
Gas industry
Citation
- Subject
- Gas industry
Gas pipelines
Citation
- Subject
- Gas pipelines
Gas pipelines
Citation
- Subject
- Gas pipelines
Mines and mineral resources
Citation
- Subject
- Mines and mineral resources
Mining
Citation
- Subject
- Mining
Natural gas
Citation
- Subject
- Natural gas
Natural gas
Citation
- Subject
- Natural gas
Natural gas
Citation
- Subject
- Natural gas
Natural gas
Citation
- Subject
- Natural gas
Natural gas pipelines
Citation
- Subject
- Natural gas pipelines
Natural gas pipelines
Citation
- Subject
- Natural gas pipelines
Petroleum
Citation
- Subject
- Petroleum
Petroleum conservation
Citation
- Subject
- Petroleum conservation
Petroleum conservation
Citation
- Subject
- Petroleum conservation
Petroleum industry and trade
Citation
- Subject
- Petroleum industry and trade
Petroleum industry and trade
Citation
- Subject
- Petroleum industry and trade
Petroleum pipelines
Citation
- Subject
- Petroleum pipelines
Railroad companies
Citation
- Subject
- Railroad companies
Railroad companies
Citation
- Subject
- Railroad companies
Railroad companies
Citation
- Subject
- Railroad companies
Railroad companies
Citation
- Subject
- Railroad companies
Railroads
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads
Railroads
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads
Railroads
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads
Railroads
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads
Railroads
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads
Railroads
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads
Railroads
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads
Railroads
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads
Railroads
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads
Railroads
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads
Railroads
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads
Railroads
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads
Railroads
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads
Railroads and state
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads and state
Railroads and state
Citation
- Subject
- Railroads and state
Railroad signal towers
Citation
- Subject
- Railroad signal towers
Water resources development
Citation
- Subject
- Water resources development
Water resources development
Citation
- Subject
- Water resources development
Conservation of natural resources
Citation
- Activity
- Conservation of natural resources
Protection of natural resources
Citation
- Activity
- Protection of natural resources
Regulating commercial vehicles
Citation
- Activity
- Regulating commercial vehicles
Regulating mines and mineral resources
Citation
- Activity
- Regulating mines and mineral resources
Regulating mining
Citation
- Activity
- Regulating mining
Regulating petroleum industry
Citation
- Activity
- Regulating petroleum industry
Regulating railroads
Citation
- Activity
- Regulating railroads
Regulating the gas industry
Citation
- Activity
- Regulating the gas industry
Regulating the petroleum industry
Citation
- Activity
- Regulating the petroleum industry
Citation
- Place
- Texas
Texas
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Arkansas River Watershed.
Arkansas River Watershed.
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Arkansas River.
Arkansas River.
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Texas
Texas
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Arkansas River Watershed
Arkansas River Watershed
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Texas
Texas
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Arkansas River
Arkansas River
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Texas
Texas
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Texas
Texas
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Texas
Texas
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Texas
Texas
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Texas
Texas
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
Citation
- Place
- Texas
Texas
Parsed from SNAC EAC-CPF.
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>
Citation
- Convention Declaration
- Convention Declaration 261