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Texas | Features | Preservation

Bob's Oil Derrick
Service Station and Cafe

Matador, Texas


A Still-Standing Relic from the Golden Age of Roadside Attractions

Hwy 70 Outside of Roaring Springs

"You Can't Miss It."

Photos and Captions by Wes Reeves

Derrick atop Bob's Oil Well station in Matador, Texas
Derrick atop Bob's Oil Well station in Matador

Built of native stone and petrified wood, Bob's was once as well-known to intersate truckers as South Dakota's Wall Drugstore. Bob was WWI veteran Luther Bedford Robertson who opened the original station with a wooden derrick in the 1930s. Luther's dedication and flair for promotion (being the only station for miles didn't hurt) made his enterprise an outstanding success. He replaced the wooden derrick with a metal one and added a cafe, garage and grocery in the late 1930s.

"Bob" died in 1947 and while his widow attempted to keep it open, it closed in the 1950s. The station and cafe are currently undergoing restoration after being placed on the Texas endangered building list in 2004. A historical marker has been placed at the site and there are hopes of turning the old landmark into a visitor's center and museum.

Bob's Oil Well Cafe, Matador, Texas
Bob's Oil Well Cafe

Historical Marker:

Bob's Oil Well

Greenville, Texas native Luther Bedford "Bob" Robertson (1894-1947), a veteran of World War I, came to Matador in the 1920s. He was a gas station attendant in 1932 when he decided to open a service station here. To promote his new business, he built a wooden oil derrick over the station. He patented his design, and in 1939 replaced the wooden derrick with one of steel that reached 84 feet in height and included lights.

Robertson was a gifted businessman and promoter, and he used any opportunity to advertise his operation and attract customers. He kept a cage of live rattlesnakes for the amusement of tourists, and from that initial attraction grew a zoo that included lions, monkeys, coyotes, a white buffalo and other animals. He paid long distance truckers to place advertising signs at strategic points across the nation noting the mileage to Bob's Oil Well in Matador, and they became well known to the motoring public. As a result of his success, Robertson enlarged his operation to include a grocery, café and garage.

In addition to his business skills, Robertson was an active civic leader in Matador. He was particularly interested in recognizing the efforts of those who served in the military during World War II. Bob Robertson died in 1947, and two weeks later a high wind toppled the steel derrick that had been the trademark of his business. His widow, Olga (Cunningham) (d. 1993), restored it two years later with even larger lights. The business did not continue long after, however, and closed in the 1950s. Later efforts to reopen it were short-lived. Today, the site serves as a reminder of a time when such bold roadside architecture was in its infancy and of a man who, through his business, widely promoted his adopted hometown.
(2005)

Bob's Oil Well Cafe old neon sign, Matador, Texas
Closeup of neon sign, hammered by a blue norther past, at Bob's Oil Well Cafe


Matador, Texas - Bob's Oil Well Cafe  petrified wood wall
Bob's Oil Well Cafe back wall

"The station and neighboring cafe were built in the early 1930s by Bob Robertson, who was as much a showman as he was a businessman. Live rattlesnakes were kept in cages inside to the delight and horror of anyone who stopped by." - Wes Reeves, 2007


Photos courtesy Wes Reeves



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