Geology, history (1917-1918 Ranger oil boom), fragmented operator landscape, top 25 units by recent production, and the practical mineral-owner playbook for Eastland County, Texas.
Get Your Free Mineral ValuationEastland County sits in north-central Texas, west of Fort Worth in the Bend Arch trend. The county includes Eastland (county seat), Ranger (the historic 1917-1918 boom town), Cisco, Gorman, and Carbon. Geographically it’s adjacent to Stephens County to the north and Comanche / Brown counties to the south.
Geologically, Eastland County is part of the eastern flank of the Bend Arch — a Pennsylvanian-age structural high that separates the Fort Worth Basin (east) from the Midland Basin / Permian (west). The arch’s Pennsylvanian-Mississippian sequence provides multiple stacked pay zones, making Eastland more formation-diverse than its Caddo-dominated neighbor Stephens.
Productive formations across Eastland County:
Marble Falls Limestone (Pennsylvanian) — the leading producing formation; 7 of top 20 wells
Strawn Group (Pennsylvanian) — Eastland is the type locality of the Strawn; named after Strawn, TX in adjacent Palo Pinto County
Duffer Formation — specific named member of the Pennsylvanian sequence
Ranger / Lower Ranger — the historic 1917 Ranger field reservoir
Caddo Limestone — same Pennsylvanian carbonate that dominates Stephens County
Eastland County’s oil story begins with the 1917 Ranger Field discovery. The McCleskey No. 1 well, completed October 1917, came in as a flowing well at over 1,700 BOPD — one of the largest discoveries of the era. Within months, Ranger, TX became one of the largest oil towns in the world, with population estimates ranging from 16,000 to 30,000 at peak (compared to ~1,000 in 1916).
The boom drew wildcatters from across the country. Drilling rigs covered the landscape; tent cities sprang up overnight; lease bonuses paid by the major oil companies created overnight millionaires of farmers and ranchers in the area. The Texas & Pacific Railway depot in Ranger handled wagonloads of crude bound for refineries across north Texas.
By 1922-1923, the easy primary production had peaked. Reservoir pressure declined; wells that had flowed naturally needed pumping units; production rates fell from hundreds of BOPD to tens of BOPD. Ranger’s population fell back to ~6,000 by 1930. But the wells stayed productive — and have continued producing for over 100 years through subsequent waterflood programs.
For more, see our Ranger Oil Boom 1917-1918 historical guide.
Eastland County’s modern production is at the extreme tail of the maturity curve. Even by Texas Bend Arch standards, per-well production is low — averaging about 6 barrels per month per well across the top 25 units. That’s ~0.2 BOPD per well: true ultra-stripper economics.
For comparison: neighboring Stephens County’s top unit (Curry Unit) produces 12,116 bbl/month from 162 wells; Eastland’s top unit (North Pioneer Unit) produces 449 bbl/month from 69 wells — roughly 27× smaller in absolute volume.
This means:
Royalty checks are smaller. A typical fractional Eastland mineral interest might generate $20-100/month in royalty income vs. $50-500/month for an equivalent Stephens interest.
Operator-side risk is higher. Many small private operators run thin margins on stripper economics; abandonment risk varies operator-to-operator.
Modern activity is rare. Only one well in the top 20 was spud in the 2010s (Winchester 1, 2017 directional Strawn target by Interstate Explorations). The county has minimal new horizontal development.
Reserve life is still long. Despite the low rates, the wells have produced for 100+ years and continue to produce small but consistent volumes.
Eastland County mineral interests are typically inherited 3-5 generations deep, with original lease bonus paid in the 1917-1925 boom era. Common ownership patterns:
Out-of-state heirs (California, Florida, Arizona, Colorado especially) who inherited fractional interests with no clear chain of title
Properties held in family trusts created in the 1980s-2000s to consolidate fractional inheritance
Suspense / unclaimed-funds situations where the operator can’t locate current owners
Partial-mineral conveyances from the boom era (NPRI / ORRI structures common in 1917-1925 deeds)
Direct buyers value Eastland County mineral interests using a discounted cash flow approach with these key inputs:
Decline rate — typically 5-10% on stripper-economics waterflood
Remaining reserve life — 10-25 years on actively-maintained units; less for marginal operators
Operator quality — variable across Eastland; BRAKA Operating and Ronning Gas & Oil are well-tenured; smaller single-lease operators may carry higher abandonment risk
Discount rate — typically 10-15% for established operator units; 15-20% for marginal positions
Realized price vs. spot — legacy north-central Texas crude typically realizes within $4-7/bbl of WTI Cushing; live spot prices
Plug & abandonment liability — for working interests, P&A obligations on stripper wells can exceed remaining cash flow value; mineral / royalty interests are not exposed
Buckhead Energy buys mineral rights and royalty interests across Eastland County, Texas — including the Ranger oil field area. Out-of-state owners are common; we handle the entire process remotely with free written offers, deed signed before a notary in your state, and proceeds wired the day of recording.
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