Inscription
Charles White (1824-1905) moved his family here from Indiana seeking new business opportunities and a drier climate for his wife's health. With the aid of his sons Wilfred Walton White and Herbert Haughton White, he constructed this two-story brick residence in 1887, four years before the organization of Ector County.
They modeled the home after their house in Indiana, adapting the style to the available building materials of the area. White farmed his 640-acre tract and also owned a mercantile store on the courthouse square. White's original tract, sold following his death, was divided by later real state transactions.
In 1923 the house and fifty acres were purchased by Oso William Pool (B.1891) who had homesteaded land in New Mexico prior to his service in world war I. During the housing shortage created by the area oil boom of 1927, pool converted his residence into sale as individual lots. Later that year he married Helen Augutha Voss and they occupied the front part of the house.
They moved in 1929, but member of the Pool family retained possession of the home until Oso Pool donated it to the county in 1977. Recorded Texas Historic Landmark - 1980.
Location
Sources
More markers in Ector
Ector County Courthouse
Odessa, TX
Seat of justice for Ector, created out of Tom Green County in 1887 and organized in 1891.
Ector County Land Rush
Odessa, TX
Here in 1904 a fight involved almost every man in Ector County, over filing a claim for 4 sections of public land.
El Paso Natural Gas Company's First Compressor Transmission Engine
Odessa, TX
A landmark tool in man's conquest of energy.
Odessa
Odessa, TX
After the Texas and Pacific Railway extended its line to the South Plains of Texas in 1881, the Odessa Land and Townsite Company of...
Penwell
Penwell, TX
Birthplace of Ector County's Oil boom.
