PENWELL,
TEXAS. Penwell, sixteen
miles southwest of Odessa in southwestern Ector County, was named for J. H.
Penn, a veteran West Texas oil operator, who drilled the discovery well of the
Penwell-Jordan oilfield. When Penn's well, the R. R. Penn Kloh-Rumsey No. 1,
came in on October 7, 1929, the area began to develop rapidly. The townsite was
officially laid out on November 8, 1929, and a post office was established
there in 1930. The first residents lived in tents or hastily constructed
shacks, but eventually better housing was built. Because many of the early
settlers were only temporary residents, accurate population statistics are
difficult to ascertain. For example, Penwell's 1930–31 population was given as
230 in one source, but as 3,000 in another. According to one source, during the
early 1930s Penwell had six lumberyards, several rooming houses, several
filling stations, two or three clothing stores, two hotels, a doctor's office,
a drugstore, a barbershop, a pool hall, a dance hall, and a paper, the Penwell News. For a while there
was also a school, but later local students were transferred to the Odessa
schools. After the 1930s Penwell's population decreased because of a decline in
local oil drilling and the movement of workers to larger cities. In 1980 its
population was estimated at seventy-five, and the town included a post office,
a service station, a welding shop, and a beer store. Some ranches were in the
vicinity. In the 1980s the nearby Odessa Raceway Park was operating from May
through October. Monahans State Park is just outside of town. In 1990 and again
in 2000 the population of Penwell was reported as seventy-four.
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