David Galloway, BSCE 1943
I grew up at College
Hill, Mississippi and enrolled
as freshman in Engineering School
in fall of 1940. I was deferred from draft and allowed to complete accelerated Civil
Engineering course in September 1943, during WWII. I joined Navy during last
semester at Ole Miss and was sent to Notre Dame
University for fifty-two day
special midshipman course. Commissioned as Ensign in Naval Civil Engineering
Corps and assigned to Thirty-First Seabee Battalion. Battalion assigned to
Fifth Marine Division for Iwo Jima Invasion. Severely wounded at end of
operation and spent six months in Navy Hospitals. Subsequently I was discharged
in September 1946.
I was employed as an Assistant
Civil Engineer by the Humble Oil & Refining Co. (Exxon), promoted to Civil
Engineer in December 1946, and to District
Engineer in September 1948. I was registered as Professional Engineer in
Mississippi in Sept. of 1947 and
in Texas in March 1948. I spent
twenty years in the Texas Division in Corpus Christi Area with over 90 % of my
effort being involved on the 1,200,000 acre King Ranch, which Humble had
successfully leased for Oil Exploration and Production. After twenty years I
was transferred to New Orleans in
1967 and into the Offshore Platform Design Section which was responsible for
the design and installation of structures in the Gulf of Mexico.
In 1968, our design group was transferred to Houston
to be housed at our Exxon Production Research Facility to continue platform
designs in conjunction with our research counterpart. An additional assignment
for me in 1969 was coordinating the research and design activities of two
consultants for possible structures in Arctic waters in water depths from the
shoreline to sixty feet, joint effort for Humble and our Canadian affiliate,
Imperial Oil Company of Canada.
Our affiliate in Canada, Imperial
Oil Co., had leases in the Arctic Ocean, where we did
not, but felt that it would only be a matter of time until we did offshore Alaska.
Imperials leases went out to water depths of sixty feet, which is where the
massive ridging starts in the ice formations. Since Imperial had no offshore
platform experience, I was assigned the duty to develop designs for Artic
Ocean activities for both Humble
and Imperial. I employed consultant firms to develop design criteria from the
shoreline to fifteen feet water depth and another to develop design criteria
from fifteen feet to sixty feet depth. I take pride in the fact that the
structures that we produced have been utilized to depths beyond the sixty foot
depth with success.
Since I had developed the expertise for ocean operations, it
followed that my expertise was needed even for our operations on shore and I
was pressed into service to provide the technology for two drilling operations
onshore that were directly across the Canning River from the Arctic Wildlife
Preserve. We also had a lease on Flaxman
Island, which was three miles
offshore from the mouth of the Canning
River, the boundary of the Arctic
Wildlife Preserve.
It was necessary that I go out on
the ocean and construct an ice road parallel to the shoreline for seventy miles
from Prudhoe Bay to access Flaxman
Island operations. Since we crossed
several bays, we were as much as five to ten miles offshore with these
operations. Since we had operations that extended over several years, this
seventy miles of ocean road was opened each year and other operators utilized
our road as well.
Since operations in the Arctic
Wildlife Preserve have come to the forefront, I suggest that access has been
available for as many as twenty five or more years for we were on the perimeter
for five or six years without detriment to the environment.
In 1980 I was asked to provide
the expertise to develop logistics and possible routes for an affiliate
company, Exxon Exploration Drilling, for two drill sites in the very deep
jungle area in Zaire.
After spending six months on this project and spending time in the jungle, I
was asked if I would be willing to attend the Berlitze School, learn how to
speak French, and return to supervise this project. I respectfully declined
this offer and accepted a transfer to Alaska
where I spent my last three and a half years with the company supervising construction
activities for our exploration drilling operations. I opted to take early
retirement at age sixty-two.
During the twenty years on the
King Ranch, I was required to maintain records of my activities and a partial
list would be construction of over 2,000 miles of roads, from clay to caliche
and to asphalt surfaced roads, with bridges and drainage structures to support
very heavy drilling equipment transport. I was responsible for erecting and
skidding loaded drilling derricks from one location to another, constructed
pipelines, bolted steel tank batteries, compressor plants, gas processing
facilities and constructed housing facilities and utilities for over seven
hundred residents. This is only a partial list but were the major factors. I
also was responsible for dredging channels in bay water areas and for
providing protective shallow water
structures for drilling and producing operations and docking facilities for
shallow water drilling operations
As you can see, the list is
almost endless, as I have not elaborated on these items. Of interest about
activities during this period, two of the sayings that were prevalent were: If one is doing well in his profession, one could expect to
double his salary each five years. Surprisingly, this statement proved to be
true up until one had about thirty years of service. The other statement was
that if one did not keep abreast of his particular branch of engineering, after
five years one had lost his ability to function in that particular facet.
Neither of these facts is relevant at this time for starting salaries have gone
from three thousand dollars per year to over three thousand dollars a month.
Additionally, with the advent of computers and other technology, one must
constantly work at keeping abreast of current technology.
Last, I should note that I was awarded a patent and
participation in two other patents over my career, One was for pressure
grouting large gas compressors to the massive concrete foundations required for
support and the other two were for structures in the Arctic oceans.
(By Dave Galloway, 2002)