Texaco Service Station Then and Now

301-303 Military Avenue – Dodge City, Kansas

I know the title of this story seems oddly nonspecific considering how many Texaco stations Dodge City had at one time. However, this service station was originally owned and operated by The Texas Company. The white stucco mission-style building had separate bays for greasing and a car wash. A grand opening was held at the brand-new station on January 17, 1931.

Dodge City Daily Globe, January 17, 1931

The men shown here in 1931 may be manager Loren Wilks and attendants Paul Moore and Benjamin Otto.

Photo: Ford County Historical Society Sam Zygner Collection

Texaco leased the station to Bob Ogg in early 1934 and it was managed by H. Gordon McCollom. The business was briefly called Mac’s Certified Service.

Dodge City Daily Globe, December 4, 1934

By 1935, it was operated by Walt Neal.

Dodge City Daily Globe, April 8, 1936

Wholesale grocer John Pressney appears to have assumed ownership by the Summer of 1936. At that time, The Texas Company’s wholesale business was still located at Military and Avenue B.

Telephone Directory Dodge City, Kansas, August 1936, Southwestern Bell Telephone Company

By 1942, the station was operated by Josh Owens. World War II Veterans Ernest Brockhausen and Quincy Glotta bought the business in January of 1946 and called it B and G Texaco Service.

Dodge City Daily Globe, February 7, 1946

Brockhausen began operating as Ernie’s Texaco Service around January of 1949. The station was listed for sale in January of 1951 due to health reasons but appears to have continued operating as Ernie’s until at least December of that year.

Dodge City Daily Globe, January 11, 1951

Other names in the 1950s included Bill’s Texaco Service and Steele’s Texaco Service. By 1957, the building was vacant and it sat for a few years before being converted into commercial space for businesses such as Kansas Abstract and Investment Co. in the mid-1960s.

Dodge City Daily Globe, August 21, 1968

Maxine Salmans was a very successful representative for the cosmetics company Fashion Two Twenty. Her studio occupied the building for almost all of the 1970s.

Dodge City Daily Globe, March 31, 1970

The property was listed for sale in December of 1979.

Dodge City Daily Globe, February 29, 1980

A new building with frontage on Avenue B was completed around 1981 and was occupied by Fast Foods of Dodge City. This building was expanded and housed tenants such as Dodge Country Insurance, Firm One Securities, Stickney Realty, and Frigon Law Firm. Lucky Liquor moved to the space on the corner around 2000.

This is how the former site of the Texaco Service Station looks today:

I’ve always loved mission-style architecture with arched doors and windows. This replacement aesthetic is most definitely not that. On the bright side, some of the concrete curbing looks original. So we’ve got that going for us, which is nice.

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Williams Service Co. Then and Now

301 N Second Avenue

At some point, I’ll write in detail about Dodge City’s beautiful City Hall building south of the tracks, but this story focuses on what came later. The ornate brick building was situated in the middle of a block bordered by South Front (yes, there were two) and West Santa Fe Trail Streets as well as Second and Third Avenues.

Postcard: Ford County Historical Society Troy Robinson Collection

In April of 1928, Lindas Lumber Company was in the process of purchasing the old City Hall lot but the City couldn’t find the deed, which had never been recorded. The plan was for City Hall to be demolished and replaced with a lumber shed on the west three-fifths of the property. The company had begun soliciting bids for demolition. Lindas then backed out of the deal after the City failed to produce the deed. The Santa Fe Railroad did a quit-claim deed and then J. M. Kirkpatrick ended up finding the original in June of 1928.

In April of 1929, James P McCollom purchased the east 75 feet of the block with an option for the next 50 feet. The lots were cleared immediately followed by construction of brick buildings with frontage along Second Avenue.

One of those buildings was a long, narrow service station at the northwest corner of Second and Trail with a large awning which extended out to the east. Merton Williams and his longtime friend, Charles B “Chick” Collison, opened the Williams & Collison station at 301 Second Avenue that Summer.

Dodge City Daily Globe, August 20, 1929

Chick Collison was murdered at his home on Sixth Avenue during a robbery on September 30, 1930. A few months later, Williams and Raymond Fredelake changed the name of the business to the Williams Service Company.

Photo: Ford County Historical Society Sam Zygner Collection

Sam Zygner photographed the station in preparation for the grand opening.

Dodge City Daily Globe, January 14, 1931

By the mid-1930s, B. L. Sullivan assumed operation of the business and renamed it Sullie’s Service Station. It then became a Socony-Vacuum Oil Service Station around 1938 or 1939. By 1941, the station was owned by Claud M Cave and Company, which was located in the building to the north at 307 Second Avenue.

The Cave business next door morphed into the Ross Cave Motor Company in the mid-1940s and the station became known as a Mobilgas One Stop Service. By 1950, the business was called Cave Tire and Service Company and it operated until April of 1952.

Dodge City Daily Globe, April 25, 1952

Earl and Lucy Steele owned Steele’s Service at Second and Trail for a year or two in the early 1950s.

Polk’s Dodge City (Ford County, Kansas) Directory 1953

Earl’s nephew, Ed Courbot, and his wife, Orma, later acquired the business and held a two-day grand opening of Courbot Service October 15-16, 1954.

Dodge City Daily Globe, October 14, 1954

The building appears to have been modernized sometime during the mid-1950s. By the time Hoover Cott took these accident photos in 1959, the mansard awnings had been removed and the brick exterior streamlined.

The station became vacant around 1969 and sat for a few years before being demolished around 1975. Since that time, the corner has been used by Sellers Motors and Lopp Motors mostly for parking and displaying automobiles.

This is how the site of Williams Service Co. looks today:

I love that the old foundation and building joints are still visible. Looking at this intersection now, it seems impossible that three of the four corners once had gas stations operating simultaneously. I even had to convince my mother it was true.

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Jimac Service Court Then and Now

311 W Spruce Street

James P McCollom of Carthage, Illinois bought the Santa Fe Trail Garage in December of 1911 and moved to Dodge City in February of 1912. Many of you already know this garage was located on the site of the First National Bank Building at Second Avenue and Spruce Street. McCollom later bought the house directly west of the garage at 309 W Spruce in addition to the neighboring lots all the way to Third Avenue.

The lots at the southeast corner of Third and Spruce sat empty for several years. In April of 1928, McCollom announced plans to construct a service station on that corner, which he would call Jimac Service Court, an awkward portmanteau derived from his two nicknames.

Dodge City Daily Globe, April 26, 1928

McCollom held a grand opening at the 25-car station on July 28, 1928.

The Dodge City Journal, July 19, 1928

The Heaston-Carter Service Company bought the Jimac station in early 1929.

Dodge City Daily Globe, March 1, 1929

This purchase increased the small Kansas chain’s station count to four.

The Dodge City Journal, March 7, 1929

The grand opening was held on April 20, 1929 with entertainment furnished by the Green Lantern Orchestra.

The Dodge City Journal, April 18, 1929

Mert Williams, who owned a couple other service stations in Dodge, purchased the business in January of 1931.

Dodge City Daily Globe, January 15, 1931

That arrangement was very brief and O. M. Balch began operating the Balch Service Station later that year.

Dodge City Daily Globe, August 5, 1931

The Balch station closed in late 1937 or early 1938. Goodyear Tire Company opened a store in the building in May of 1938. By 1941, “Blondy” Hamilton was operating the Boot Hill Service Station at Third and Spruce.

The Dodge City Journal, October 2, 1941

This was replaced by the Hardin Service Station in the mid-1940s.

Dodge City Daily Globe, June 27, 1946

By the early 1950s, the Lowery Tire and Service Company owned by Thomas and Beryl Lowery occupied the former Jimac station.

Now is a good time to mention the adjacent structure to the east. Ford County Building & Loan Association shared the epitome of mid-century building aesthetics with Dodge City Abstract & Investment Company for several years. It was possibly the bane of Tom Lowery’s existence.

The neighboring building entered into a grudge match with the Lowery station’s U. S. Royal Tires sign.

Bob and Mabel Lanphier bought the station in the late 1950s but kept the Lowery name.

Polk’s Dodge City (Ford County, Kansas) Directory 1959

Clarence and Sylvia Beye then bought the business around 1961 and operated it until late 1965 or early 1966. Beye Service was the last station to operate in this location.

Dodge City Daily Globe, December 17, 1965

The building sat vacant for a while before being remodeled by Floyd and Hazel Fisher, who operated Fisher Rental Service at Third and Spruce from around 1968 to 1970.

Dodge City Daily Globe, May 31, 1968

The Salvation Army’s Thrift Store was located in the building briefly in the early 1970s.

Ray and Ann Rodriguez held a grand opening event at their Rayann Imports store from June 2 through June 9, 1973. They started out with onyx, wood, straw, and ceramics from Mexico.

Dodge City Daily Globe, June 1, 1973

By late 1976 or early 1977, a pottery and jewelry studio called The Wheel and Torch briefly occupied the building.

Dodge City Daily Globe, February 3, 1977

However, the space was empty by April of 1977 when the Dodge City Racing Pigeon Association held a “giant rummage sale” in that spot.

Dodge City Daily Globe, April 22, 1977

After sitting vacant again for a couple years, the building was remodeled into office space around 1980. Attorney Douglas Myers had an office there for about five years. Various insurance and investment companies such as Kansas MONY Associates also occupied the building in the 1980s.

Dodge City Daily Globe, October 30, 1989

Around 1990, First National Bank expanded its Trust, Mortgage, and Consumer Loan departments into the combined structures of the old service station and savings and loan building. That arrangement continued with the string of successor banks after First National sold to Bank IV in 1994.

Bank of America sold the building to the Dodge City Area Chamber of Commerce and Dodge City – Ford County Development Corporation in 2001. The Dodge City Legend basketball team maintained an office there as well.

The Chamber and Eco-Devo offices later relocated the depot and the building was sold to Boot Hill Museum. A ribbon cutting was held at the new Boot Hill Resource Center in October of 2018.

This is how the former Jimac Service Court looks today:

It’s always interesting to walk in and around buildings with confusing arrays of angles and elevations. The modifications to these structures have diminished their historic value but if you look down at the concrete near the northwest corner, a little sliver still remains.

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Fansler’s Service Then and Now

100 E Chestnut St/Wyatt Earp Blvd

In Dodge City’s early days, the area directly north of the Santa Fe Depot on the east side of what is now Central Avenue, was dedicated to what one might consider back of house operations. There were livery stables, blacksmith shops, saloons, and rooming houses. Wood frame buildings came and went. It wasn’t until after 1905 that a more permanent operation, Andy Falkner’s Palace Livery, occupied the corner of what would become 100 E Chestnut Street.

The livery stable changed hands a couple times and by 1911, it had been expanded and improved with iron cladding and a concrete floor. W. T. Hale and his son, Will, announced they had purchased the property in December of 1912 with plans to build a modern 50 x 90-foot automobile garage. This concrete building with buff colored stucco would have the Hales’ Ford showroom on the main floor with offices above.

Demolition of the old livery barn began on January 20, 1913 and the new garage was ready for occupancy that May.

Sou’Wester, 1913

Carl Fay and Thomas Traynor leased the garage in September of 1917 and operated it as the City Garage & Machine Shop. A car elevator allowed them to locate a machine shop on the second floor. The Hales retained office space upstairs as well as the Pullman Tires sales agency.

Dodge City Daily Globe, September 1, 1917

Traynor sold his interest in the garage to Chester Royse in September of 1918. T. E. Young joined Fay as a partner around 1922 and then Fay operated the business on his own for a couple of years.

Etrick’s Ford County Directory, 1924

Different businesses such as transportation and auto painting companies leased space on the second floor.

The Southwest News, March 26, 1925

C. E. Williams joined Fay at the garage in 1925 and they bought the Superior Garage at Central and Military in December of that year. The slightly renamed Dodge City Garage was then operated by Frank Botkin, who also had a taxi and car rental business in the building.

Albert and Herman Schraeder took over the garage in January of 1928 and began operating 24 hours a day. They also had a Chevrolet rental car service. Leroy Bretz operated the garage during the 1930s. J. G. English bought the building and in 1936 had it completely remodeled. The southwest corner was cut out to create the drive-through English Service Station.

Harold Fansler of Garden City bought the English station in August of 1938.

Dodge City Daily Globe, August 4, 1938

His brother, Steve, moved with his family to Dodge City to remodel and operate the new Fansler’s Service.

Photo courtesy Ford County Historical Society Troy Robinson Collection

On February 7, 1942, a fire broke out in a room located at the south end of the second floor where tires were retread.

Although the building sustained little damage, the significant tire loss was a huge issue due to wartime rubber shortages.

Dodge City Daily Globe, February 9, 1942

Steve Fansler died in 1947 but the service station retained the Fansler name for a few years after it was purchased by Ralph McCoy.

Dodge City Daily Globe, April 29, 1949

The business operated for a couple years as McCoy Service and Tire Co. followed by Richard Lempka’s L & L Super Service.

Southwestern Bell Dodge City, Kansas Telephone Directory May, 1954

After the building sat vacant for about a year, Jerry Felts and Pearl Shepherd opened their Midtown Garage in April of 1956.

Dodge City Daily Globe, April 14, 1956

Stauth Brothers Oil Company obtained a permit to demolish the Hale Building in the Spring of 1959. The old concrete garage was replaced with a modern Skelly station which was set back from the street with a large parking area.

Photo by Hoover Cott

This 24-hour service station was leased to Bill Lembright.

Dodge City Daily Globe, December 5, 1959

Lembright’s Skelly Service held its grand opening December 19, 1959.

Dodge City Daily Globe, December 17, 1959

Bill Lembright and Lembright Oil Company bought out Stauth Brothers in 1961. At that time, Larry Cunningham managed the station at Central and Wyatt Earp.

Dodge City Daily Globe, March 9, 1961

Around 1964, the station became Uptown Skelly Service operated by Lloyd P Loughridge. Roy Piper managed it from about 1966 to 1967. Former manager Larry Cunningham operated the station as Cunningham’s Skelly Service around 1968 and it was vacant by 1970. Around that time, the building was moved to the northwest corner of Wyatt Earp Boulevard and 113 Road where Flying J is today. Once the parcel was cleared, it was paved and used as a City parking lot.

This is how the former site of Fansler’s Service looks today:

I won’t close with the standard complaint about how much we love parking lots in Dodge City. I like free parking. And this lot has a great view of the depot. You can always count on empty spaces when there’s something big happening at Boot Hill. It’s wonderful.

If you like what you see, be sure to subscribe (way at the bottom of the post on mobile devices) to receive an email each time a new post is published and share on social media. You can also support my work by donating below. This content is 100% funded by history fanatics such as yourself. Thanks for reading!

Donation

Your support keeps the content flowing! Make a one-time donation. Your contribution is appreciated!

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