Olin Wellborn Nicholas Culberson

Portrait of Olin Wellborn Nicholas Culberson Headstone Photograph


Culberson

Olin
1886 - 1961

Mary Rochelle
1892 - 1972

Back of headstone

Olin Culberson October 26, 1886 - June 22, 1961

Railroad Commissioner 1941 - 1961
County Clerk Hill County 1920 - 1924
County Judge Hill County 1924 - 1929
Secty Texas Volunteer Firemen 1920 - 1960

His Wife

Mary Rochelle Culberson
Full Name: Olin Wellborn Nicholas Culberson
Location: Section:Republic Hill, Section 2 (C2)
Row:G  Number:3
Reason for Eligibility: Member and Chairman, Railraod Commission of Texas 
Birth Date: October 26, 1886 
Died: June 22, 1961 
Burial Date: June 24, 1961 
 

CULBERSON, OLIN WELLBORN NICHOLS (1886-1961). Olin Culberson, son of William Albert and Martha Artemesia (Richardson) Culberson, was born at Turnersville, Coryell County, Texas, on October 26, 1886. He was taught by his parents at Culberson Select School, a family enterprise, and afterward labored as a railroad worker in Hillsboro until 1911. That year he was appointed deputy clerk of Hill County. The following year he married Mary Lou Rochelle of Hubbard; the couple had one daughter.

In 1918 Culberson resigned his office to serve in World War I. Upon returning to Hillsboro, he was twice elected county clerk of Hill County. In that office he discovered and exposed a $263,000 road-bond fraud. In 1925 he became county judge. During his two terms on the bench he used the recovered bond-fraud money to construct needed roads and bridges. He refused to run for a third term, moved to Edna, and purchased an interest in a dry-goods store. He moved in 1932 to Austin, where he was asked to accept a position with the Railroad Commission in order to conduct a rate investigation of the Lone Star Gas Company. First as chief examiner and later as chief of the gas utilities division, he conducted sixteen major rate investigations for the commission. These antagonized certain gas interests, pressure groups sought his removal, and in 1939 he was discharged.

The following year, as a reform candidate, Culberson bested eighteen opponents and was elected railroad commissioner. He was reelected three consecutive times. In addition to proposing a weekly meeting of the railroad commissioners and insisting on ten days' notice for all public hearings, he was responsible for other important rulings. Political appointees were replaced by graduate petroleum engineers. The flaring of casinghead gas was stopped, and its return to the well became mandatory. A malodorant was added to natural gas. Annual inspections of liquefied petroleum gas installations in schools and public buildings were established. Culberson implemented a new system of oil accounting and fought freight-rate discrimination against Southwest Texas. While on the Railroad Commission, he earned a reputation as an uncompromising champion of independent oil producers.

Culberson served the Texas Firemen's and Fire Marshals' Association as secretary for over forty years, and he was active in many charitable organizations. He died on June 22, 1961, and was buried in the State Cemetery in Austin. In 1963 the Olin Culberson Memorial Research Center, a center for the study of cardiovascular diseases, was dedicated at Scott and White Memorial Hospital in Temple.

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Olin Culberson Scrapbook, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin. Houston Press, June 24, 1961. Vertical Files, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin.

Robert Stephen Peel

Handbook of Texas Online, s.v. "CULBERSON, OLIN WELLBORN NICHOLS," http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/CC/fcu4.html (accessed September 17, 2005).

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