The Four Sixes
EMPIRE
A FAMILY LEGACY
Four Sixes Ranch is among the most storied businesses in Texas history
BURNETT FAMILY
The family, the legacy, and the beginnings of a historic, formidable ranch
QUARTER HORSES
The rise from a single stud to an internationally-recognized equine breeding program
CATTLE
The journey from an initial 100 cattle to becoming a frontrunner in the industry
THE 6666 BRANDS
The unmistakable, iconic identification of the best horses and cattle
LAND & OIL
At one time, the Burnett ranches included more than a third of a million acres. After 1980, however, various parcels, such as the Triangle Ranch, were sold. Today, the two main ranches – the Four Sixes Ranch near Guthrie and the Dixon Creek Ranch near Panhandle – total 260,000 acres.
While cattle and ranching were the cornerstones upon which the Burnett Family fortunes were founded, it was the discovery of oil that allowed the business grow and led to the establishment of the Burnett Foundation which today benefits so many worthy causes.
Actual drilling of Gulf No. 2 Burnett, 16 miles north of Panhandle, Texas, began in November, 1920 and was completed in April, 1921. It was 3,052 feet deep, and 175 barrels were produced during the first 24 hours of pumping. The well produced constantly for more than 50 years. This was the first oil well brought in on the Texas Panhandle Field, relatively small compared to future wells, one of which produced 10,000 barrels a day.
Following this first discovery, hundreds of people flooded the town of Panhandle. Oil field workers, lawyers, firefighters and lumbermen literally changed the city in a very short time. So busy was the Panhandle Oil Field from 1919 to 1957, that it was considered too dangerous to smoke where the drilling was taking place, so the men took up chewing tobacco like the old favorite brands Mail Pouch and Beech Nut.
Oil continued to be an important part of the Burnett Legacy, as over the years more wells were brought in. In 1969, another large field was struck, this one at the Four Sixes Ranch in Guthrie.
FOUR SIXES MANAGERS
The Four Sixes is a place of continuity and tradition. Through the years, there have been just six managers at the ranch headquarters in Guthrie, Texas: J.W. “Bud” Arnett, Horace Bryant, George Humphreys, J.J. Gibson, Jr., his son Mike Gibson, and Joe Leathers.
BUD ARNETT
Bud Arnett had the distinction of being the 8 Ranch’s only manager and the Four Sixes’ first. He was hired by Captain Burnett when he bought the 8 Ranch at the turn of the 20th century and made it the Four Sixes. Arnett’s tenure lasted from the open range days of the Old West into the modern era of ranching. He retired in 1930 after more than 30 years with the Sixes.
HORACE BRYANT
Horace Bryant, formerly wagon boss for the Sixes, was well-liked by all but managed the ranch for only two years, making his intention to leave for personal reasons in 1932.
GEORGE HUMPHREYS
George Humphreys started working on the ranch in 1918 at the age of 18, hired by Bud Arnett. He was made manager in 1932 and guided the ranch through the Depression and all-time low cattle prices. He developed the horse operation and also served as sheriff of King County from 1928 to 1948, receiving the designation of Honorary Texas Ranger. He retired from the Four Sixes after 52 years on Nov. 1, 1970.
J.J. GIBSON, JR.
J.J. Gibson, Jr. was the ranch manager from 1970 through 1991. Gibson received the Texas Trailblazer Award at the Texas Roundup in 1998, was a member of the Hall of Fame of the American Hereford Association, and he received the Foy Proctor Cowman Award of Honor in 2001 just days before his death on October 14 of that year.
MIKE GIBSON
Mike Gibson, son of J.J. Gibson, Jr., succeeded his father in 1991, and took great pride in helping maintain the fine reputation of this legendary ranch.
JOE LEATHERS
Joe Leathers was named General Manager in 2008. He previously had managed the Burnetts’ Dixon Creek Ranch near Panhandle, Texas. His special interest is in the cattle program and rangeland management side of the business, and he works with Dr. Nathan Canaday on some aspects of the ranch’s horse program.
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