Background
Eddie Chiles was born in Itasca, Texas to Harsh Edmonds Chiles and Jewell Files.
Eddie Chiles was born in Itasca, Texas to Harsh Edmonds Chiles and Jewell Files.
In 1934, he graduated from the University of Oklahoma with a Bachelor of Surgery degree in Petroleum Engineering.
He was also the paternal uncle of actress Lois Chiles. After graduating from Wentworth Military Academy in Lexington, Missouri, he worked as an oil patch roustabout and as a merchant marine before hitchhiking to Norman, Oklahoma in 1930. In 1939, after working as a Sales Engineer with Reed Roller Bit Company in Houston, he founded the Western Company of North America.
He started the company with two trucks and three employees.
Western served the petroleum industry with technical services required in the discovery and production of oil and gas. The company grew to become a major oil services firm, primarily in acidizing, fracturing and cementing.
At its peak, the Western Company had over 5,000 employees and annual worldwide revenues of over $500 million. During the 1970s, the Western Company also operated an offshore drilling company run by Mr.
Chiles" brother, Clay Chiles.
The company was sold to BJ Services in 1995. As an advocate for a smaller and less intrusive federal government, Chiles was also known for his 1970s radio commentaries. His trade-mark sign-on "I"m Eddie Chiles, and I"m mad as hell," created an incredible demand for bumper stickers that read "I"m mad too, Eddie!" Western also featured television commercials telling viewers "If you don"t have an oil well, get one—you"ll love doing business with Western!" Through these conservative radio commentaries, Chiles became a folk hero in the southwest section of the nation.
He died in Fort Worth, Texas.