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The Glass Brothers of Oak Island, TX

Self-Taught & Saltwater Tough

By Marie Hughes

  

Levi Edgar Glass, father of the Glass brothers of Oak Island, Texas, was born in Leesville, Louisiana in 1914. Levi was named after a Jewish merchant in town who had loaned his sharecropper grandfather, Samuel Garrison Glass, money to plant his crop. Samuel, although an educated man who was the head instructor at the local school, found himself caught up in the economic decline of the day. Levi spent much of his younger years with his grandfather learning firsthand the tough life of a sharecropper. Working side by side with him, the boy and his grandfather found themselves caught between the promise of the roaring twenties and the harsh realities of poverty. Leesville, situated on the edge of Louisiana's pine forest, was still very much a frontier-feeling town shaped by logging and farming. During the lean years, many of the sharecroppers worked falling timber or hauling logs to supplement their scanty income. 


By 1925 the logging industry had run its course and agriculture was in decline, due to falling prices after World War I. The future for the Glass family looked leaner than their already struggling existence. Levi, now eleven years old, helped his grandfather load the family wagon with their meager possessions and set course for Texas, whose oil boom opened vast opportunities for the working man and the promise of a brighter future. What a mixture of emotions young Levi must have had as he left the only life he had known and set out for the Texas frontier. As the streams of Louisiana's jazz music, the scent of fresh cut pine, and the memory of hardship faded behind him the excitement of a new adventure spurred him on as they bumped along on either dusty or muddy roadways, making slow but steady progress to the promises that drew them West. 

The Profits of Prohibition . . .

Amidst the Promise of Petroleum

 Baytown and Humble Oil were booming by 1925 and were a big part of why families were drawn into Texas.  Sam settled there and opened a bar, named Sam's Place, in Old Baytown at the south gate of Humble Oil Company, now Exxon.  Although prohibition was officially the law it was far from "in full swing" officially.  Despite having some of the harshest Prohibition laws in the country, Texas had a thriving black market for alcohol.  Coastal areas near the Gulf, like Baytown, were particularly prone to smuggling.  Speakeasies and bootlegging were common across Texas.  "I would imagine Baytown was pretty wild in those days," said Sam Glass, youngest son of Levi Glass.  "It was during the roaring twenties and a boom town because of the building of the Humble Refinery.  It was during the prohibition days and my dad told me that he and another kid would carry a gallon of kerosene in one hand and a gallon of moonshine from the bootlegger in the other and walk down the boardwalk in front of the joints to my grandfather's so-called café and pool hall called Sam's Place.  He said a couple of times the sheriff would ask the boys, 'what y'all got in them jugs?' and they would say, 'kerosene sir,' then hand him the one with the kerosene.  He would smell it then tell them to get out of there.  Sam's Place was next door to a world famous brothel called Maw Church's.  The seamen who make port there would frequent it,” explained Sam.

Levi’s dad, James Calvin Glass, came later and became a pipefitting superintendent for Humble Oil.  Our father learned to weld at an early age and during World War II he welded at Todd's Ship Yard on Green's Bayou in Houston, building the Liberty Ships.  After the war was over, he farmed rice in Crosby and continued to weld.  In the early 50s he joined the Pile Drivers, Divers and Wharf Local Union 2079 in Houston, TX.” 

From One Father's Example . . .

Grew Three Strong Branches

"The Glass family moved to Oak Island on Double Bayou in 1957 and started a seafood business with an old World War II mine sweeper that my dad converted into a shrimp boat," stated Sam.  "Then, in the early 70s the family started Glass and Son's Shipyard at Oak Island, Texas.  My dad built 7 steel-hull shrimp boats 35' to 65' in length.  He was a master at getting an idea and making it work or repurposing something.  He understood hydraulics and purposed them for his needs on the boats he built.  My brothers and I got all of our know-how and drive to build Stab Cat from him.  All three of his boys followed in his footsteps,” said Sam, beaming with family pride. 

Matriarch, Mentor, and Moral Compass

She Kept the Family Steady Through Changing Times

Sam said his mother, Gladys Gertrude Glass, also known as Dutch, was the glue that held the Glass house together. She was born to Frank Otto Teten and Bessie Jane Ayrhart in 1917 at Goose Creek, TX, where her family owned a dairy farm. "She was delivered at the dairy farm by Dr. Schilling, whose office was on Cedar Bayou at the time,” Sam said. “Whether it was the elder Schilling or the son is unclear. She was the oldest of eight siblings. Her parents, who were of Dutch descent, migrated to Baytown from the Midwest, drawn by the booming Pelly oil field where her dad became a wooden derrick builder. The family also ran their family dairy farm. Gladys said her brothers would milk the cows by hand before going to school and then again when they returned home in the evening. During World War II, Gladys, her mother Bessie Teten, and two of her aunts crated bombs at the San Jacinto Ordinance Depot on the North side of the Houston Ship Channel by the old Washburn tunnel. It was all women who crated the bombs, and then the longshoremen would load them onto the ships," explained Sam.  

He Brought the Grit, She Brought the Grace

“It was quite a match. On my daddy’s side they were all bootlegger type, and mommas were strait-laced Lutheran type and dairy farmers who came here from the mid-west. My grandfather Teton raised eight kids of his own and forty-four foster kids. Where they lived was like an army barracks. The house was originally an old library in Liberty, Texas. They moved it out and made it a black school. My grandpa bought that schoolhouse and it was a big old house. It was set up for boys and girls and had a bathroom on each end of it and had huge bedrooms and a big old living area. The girls were on one end of it with Grandpa and Grandma Teten and the boys were on the other end of it. The dining room table was about 20-feet long. They did everything the straight up German way, the boys would eat first, and the girls and grandma would stand behind them. Once they finished and went out to the field to work, the girls and grandma would eat and clear the table. That’s just the way they did things. They’d always have a Bible verse to read around the table. You talk about summer camp for me and my cousins! There was usually a different group of kids whenever we got there, and some of the kids came from some pretty rough backgrounds, but everybody got treated the same.”  “There was one family of Walker kids, there were seven of ‘em and the youngest was in diapers. Grandpa and Grandma Teten raised them all the way through high school. One was a big ole boy named Jack. Grandpa usually paired us up with someone to work with in the fields, and I always got paired up with old Jack. That was a pretty good deal. Grandpa Teton baled hay; he was a custom hay hauler for square bales. He had 500 acres from the river to almost Hwy 146. He’d have contracts with people and there’d be eighteen wheelers from Oklahoma and wherever lined up in the fields and you’d load ‘em, everything was by hand. Old Jack, he was great at that, but when you were picking strawberries, he could eat more than I could pick. I was low to the ground but about all I was doing was feeding him,” laughed Sam. “At dinner time, we would all take turns reading a verse. Old Jack read so slow he would just about starve us to death. We’d all be saying, ‘come on Jack, come on Jack.” but it was all good, we had a lot of fun. There were forty-four of those orphans and when Grandpa died, forty-two were at his funeral. The other two were in the military, and they sent telegrams. That’s just a testimony of what kind of man grandpa was,” Sam said with heartfelt pride.  

The Glue That Held the Glass House Together

When James and Gladys built their solid brick family home in 1956, she laid all the interior row of bricks and their father, James laid the exterior ones. She also wired the house and built the cabinets. The house withstood hurricanes Carla, Alicia, Ike and Beryl and it is still standing and family owned to this day.  

Edward Levi "Eddie" Glass

Mr. Perfection

"My brother, Eddie Levi Glass, was a unique person," said Sam. "Everything he did was done as perfectly as he could possibly do it. He was on a troop ship headed towards Korea and the Korean War, but three days before he landed in Fourchon, South Korea, the armistice was signed between the United States and North Korea creating the demilitarized zone at the 38th parallel. Eddie was in air defense, but as the wisdom of the Army goes, they made him a typist. He could smoke a typewriter," exclaimed Sam. "He could type 80 to 90 words per minute because he and some other high school students re-typed all the Cold Springs, Texas court records for 50 cents a page and they had to be error free. Because a neighboring county courthouse had burned down, Cold Springs wanted to back up all of their records. Wouldn't a copying machine have been nice, but this was in 1951," noted Sam. 'Eddie was sharp. He taught himself to run the AutoCAD programs that Stab Cat needed, mastering them without formal training. He could type a letter like a Philadelphia lawyer and if you said a word he could spell it. Beyond his brains he had music in him. With his guitar he could bring Marty Robbins' El Paso and Eddie Arnold's Cattle Call to life and one would be hard pressed to distinguish between the voices. Folks would toss tips into the center hole of his guitar. Joe and I were lucky to be able to play the juke box if we had a quarter," laughed Sam. "I can't count the times that we would be on a job somewhere staying in some flea-bitten motel and Eddie would flip that old auditorium size Gibson guitar over on the bed and shake out the tips people had stuffed into the center hole the night before. He would use it to buy us breakfast. He could sell an Eskimo an ice box and talk pile driving to pile drivers because he had definitely walked the walk," said Sam with obvious admiration for his older brother's abilities.


Crushed but Not Broken

 
"In 1969, while on a job in East Pakistan for Raymond International a pile pulled apart and fell on him. As a result it broke his collar bone, all of his ribs on one side, his hip and both legs. An inch and three quarters of one leg was completely pulverized. He returned to the states accompanied by a nun who was a nurse in the American Mission Hospital in East Pakistan. He was in a body cast from the waist down. A doctor in Houston, Texas put him back together again. I only saw him briefly in the hospital because I was shipping out to Vietnam," said Sam. “He was on total Social Security disability for about five years. In 1974, I was running a crane in the Persian Gulf on a Brown and Root lay barge and I received a letter from him. He said he felt he could go back to work if there was anything on the barge he could do. I went to the barge superintendent, Billie Dean Taylor and he sent a Tel-x to Houston. Two weeks later Eddie got off the supply boat, guitar in Hand. From that time forward, he never looked back, he went on to set pile driving records. All three Glass brothers were in Raymond Inc. Mile of Pile Club. This meant that we drove 5,280' of pilings in the ground in an 8-hour shift. What made this job unique was the rig Eddie used was completely steam-driven. It might have been steam but it was faster than greased lightning.
 

Born to Lead

"After the 1st Gulf War in 1991, Eddie worked putting out oil well fires. He supervised building the berms around the burning wells and pumping sea water into them from the Persian Gulf. This was to cool the ground around them because the ground was so hot that even though they would blow out the fire it would reignite. He worked with all the Hell Fighters; Red Adair, Boots and Coots, Wild Well Control and Safety Control. He was working for Betchel International at this time. In 1993, Eddie took over operations at the Louisiana office of Stab Cat working there until his death in 2020. He was a born leader and always game for trying something new. He will be sorely missed," concluded Sam.   

James O. "Joe" Glass

Rough, Tough, & Politically Incorrect

 "Just like my brother, Eddie, my brother Joe was unique," said younger brother Sam. "I had a front row seat and sometimes a ringside seat growing up with him. He was tough, rough, and most of the time, just like Eddie and me, he was not politically correct, but that was the world we were raised in," declared Sam.

"In the early 50s, my dad rice farmed on the West side of the Trinity River at Camilla, Texas, where the Lake Livingston Dam is now. There was no dam there when he farmed there and the Trinity flooded his fields 3 years in a row. He gave up rice farming and the family moved back to Baytown and he went back to welding. Eddie joined the Army and dad, mom, Joe and I moved into a little tin house that my grandfather Teten, Joe and mother built on the end of South Road in Baytown, while dad was working offshore. It was very small, it couldn't have been more than 20' x 20'. It was so small that Joe's and my headboard was back-to-back to dad and mom's headboard. The only room that was petitioned off was the bathroom."

Golden Gloves . . . I Never Saw HIm Lose

"My uncle, Frank Glass, had been a boxer in the Pacific Fleet during World War II. He had a ring at his house in Highlands, Texas and he got Joe and Ted into boxing. At Robert E. Lee High School in Baytown, after football season was over, every Friday night was fight night. Joe would fight his weight and go on to fight all weights. I never saw him lose. He had dozens of golden gloves he had won hanging from the rear view mirror of his old Mercury. I think my brother and his cousins would fight anybody anytime with or without gloves," grinned Sam. 

A Born Athlete

 "Joe was eleven years older than me and I didn't realize it at the time but I was an eye-witness to a real athlete in the making. During the summer time Joe would work for our uncle Benny Ferrell, who was the maintenance man at Robert E. Lee High School. Joe would run to Robert E. Lee to work, which was about 4.5 miles according to Google Earth, and run back to the little tin house before dark. I never understood why he didn't take his car, but that was Joe, he was the J. J. Watts of the day. He was coached by the great Dan Stallworth, who was his high school coach. When he graduated he was offered 26 different full-ride scholarships, but he went to the University of Houston where Al Lahar was the head coach at the time. Joe was the youngest player to start a conference game at Rice Stadium, playing in 1957. They won that conference game that year. In college he played a Blue-Gray game at Texas A & M. Bear Bryant was the coach for A & M at that time, but he didn't coach that game. However, he did talk to the players and Joe was super impressed with him. Joe was offered a chance to try out for the Green Bay Packers, but he opted out to start a family. He played two seasons for the Houston Flyers, a semi-pro football team, and I got a chance to be their water boy. They played some real football because it wasn't about the money; it was just for the love of the game."
 

A Competitor In Everything He Did

 

"Joe went on to be the southern manager of Raymond International, which at the time was the largest foundation company in the world. Joe was over all of Raymond International jobs south of the Mason Dixon Line. Just like Eddie and I, he was a member of the Mile-of-Pile Club. All three of us brothers drove every type of pile in almost every part of the world. Joe was a competitor in everything he did, whether playing football, pool, hunting, driving pile or fishing, he would one up you. Joe's and my good friend, Dick Walker, talk all the time about if there was a flounder within a mile of us while we were fishing they would just come over to the boat and give up to Joe. He just had their number," laughed Sam.  

"One thing about Joe Glass," declared Sam, "there was no quit in him, he was like a pit bulldog, once he started something he would fight it until it got done. Joe wasn't easy to work with but if you did your job he would stand behind you 100%. There was a joke at the union hall, if one of us Glass brothers called the hall for a crew the pile drivers would ask which one of the Glass brothers it was. If it was Joe they would request to be put on the bottom of the go-out list and go back to playing dominoes. More than likely Joe had run their butt off before. Joe had a reputation, if you couldn't get it you couldn't stay and it was his way or the highway and he meant it," Sam exclaimed.  

A Small Town Dream

With a World Wide Reach

"Joe and I started Stab Cat in 1993 and both our names are on the patents. Joe retired in 2000 and ran Stab Cat full time until his death in 2017. Just like my brother Eddie, he will be sorely missed, Sam stated sadly.  

Samuel M. "Sam" Glass

Learning From the Best

 “I grew up in Oak Island, south of Anahuac, Texas, where my family ran seafood and shipyard businesses” said Sam. “My father was a welder by trade, and he built steel hull shrimp boats from the keel up.” Sam was basically raised as an only child, as his two brothers were 11 and 13 years older than him and began families of their own in Oak Island around the time Sam started school. “Growing up my life was not “give-me” as a kid, I was a welder’s helper, tool room boy, and anything my father needed to build the boats. I learned a lot and it has stuck with me to this day. Life was good at Double Bayou for me, as a kid. We moved to Chambers County in 1956 and when I was not helping my father or mother with something I had a john boat, 22-rifle, and a beagle dog. As a kid, I spent most of my time hunting nutria rats and alligators and running trot lines, most of the time with my old beagle. His name was Beat You, because he would always try to beat you in the front door of the house. Mother did not allow dogs in the house, but every now and then he would figure out a new entrance plan,” said Sam with a chuckle.

“When I was in about the eighth grade, I ran shrimp boats and crew boats because, in our little community, my father’s friends were all licensed crew boat captains or tugboat captains, who knew their business well. They showed me how to operate a boat the right way. As a kid, I learned so much from them. I could not have asked for a better situation than my father, mother, brothers, and friends as my mentors. Although it required significant effort, the experience was invaluable as I acquired knowledge not typically found in books,” declared Sam.

Turning Dreams Into Reality

 “My expertise revolved mostly around the marine side of pile driving, such as building barge docks and ship docks," said Sam.  "In 1964 at the age of fifteen, I went to work on my first public job. I started out my pile driving career as a laborer. The job was located where Interstate 10 crosses from Port Allen, LA to Baton Rouge, LA, on the Port Allen side of the Mississippi River. Beginning in 1964 and continuing throughout high school, I worked each summer and during Christmas holidays with either Eddie or Joe Glass, they were both supervisors for Raymond Concrete Pile. When I graduated from Anahuac high school in 1967, I had a union book out of local 2079 Houston Texas Pile Drivers, Wharf Workers and Divers local union. I was employed through the union hall until I was drafted in 1969,” said Sam. Sam served in the United States Army in Germany and Vietnam from 1967 to 1970 advancing to the rank of E5 Buck Sergeant. He received the National Defense Service Medal, Republic of Vietnam Campaign Medal, Vietnam Service Medal and Army Commendation Medal for Meritorious Achievement. “The union hall kept my book on reserve status until I got out of the Army in 1970, then I picked it back up and started working out of the hall again. I kept a paid-up union book for 23 years and then I was completely in supervision. Around 1985, most southern states adopted an open shop policy, which allowed companies paying the prevailing wage to hire employees directly from the general public. This open shop policy killed the union,” noted Sam. 


"I hold a Master's Captain License with Master of Tow endorsement.  I have worked from the North end of the Persian Gulf through the Strait of Hormuz to the Gulf of Oman and built multiple docks in the U.S.A. and overseas.  Like my brothers, I am a member of the Mile of Pile Club, which means we could drive 5,280 feet of footage in the ground in an eight hour shift. I was the dreamer of us three brothers; I could dream up an ideas and take my T-square and triangle and put it on paper, always trying to make things better," Sam explained.  

The Hooking Bull

 “In 1972, I was captain for Brown & Root operating a tugboat in Galveston Bay. I then moved from being a tugboat captain to a crane operator in Galveston Bay for Brown & Root. In 1973, I went overseas with Brown & Root, working on a lay barge in the Persian Gulf. I worked on the lay barge Le Minor as a crane operator for 2 ½ years. The Le Minor was 600 feet long, 150 feet wide, and it drafted about 30 feet. When it was fully crewed up for laying pipe it had 250 men on it. I then moved over to one of Brown & Root’s big Derek Barges, and I worked on it for 2 ½ years as a deck supervisor. The Derek Barge was 150 feet wide, 700 feet long, and also drafted about thirty feet of water. It had a 500-ton steam Clyde revolving crane on one end and a 2000-ton stiff leg on the other end. My shift was from 12 noon to 12 midnight. I was 27-years-old at the time, but when I stepped on that deck for those twelve hours, I was the hooking bull. I had over 150 men working for me and they were from every nationality you can imagine. To say the least, it was quite a power trip. In the five years I worked overseas, I came home only three times. I earned a significant income; however, it affected my family life, leading me to question its overall value,” reflected Sam. “I came back to the United States in 1977. With the money I made overseas, I built a set of ship rails and started a shipyard at Oak Island. The shipyard was named G & S Marine, an abbreviation of Glass and Sons Inc. It eventually turned into Double Bayou Marine. I managed the shipyard and offshore services. We serviced the oil industry in Galveston Bay with equipment like a crane barge and material barge. By the late 1980s the oil business collapsed. It was so bad in the oil business at the end of the 80s that there was a saying, ‘The last one out of the oil patch turned the lights off.’” 


“In 1987, I went back to work for Raymond Concrete and Pile, which was a division of Raymond International, who had been in business for 104 years, at that time; they were the biggest foundation contractors in the world. Their assets were substantial; however, the board of directors voted to shut it down and file Chapter 11. They sold all their assets, which held considerable value. In 1990, I went to work for BoMac Construction, Beaumont, TX. I maintained employment with the organization for a period of 25 years, until I retired in 2015. I went into Stab Cat full time with my brothers and in 2017, with the passing of my brother Joe, I acquired his interest,” concluded Sam.  

Patented Proof That . . .

Pioneers Still Thrive in Small Places

 Sam and Joe invented, built, and patented Stab Cat Sheet Pile Threader, which has a provincial patent, and Stompper Mandrel Sheet, which has a pioneer invention patent. Both inventions are working to this day on construction sites in the United States and around the world.  

Tune in Next Month For . . .

The Stab Cat Story

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