Soak up water, oil, coolants and spills. Wide selection of spill kits and sorbents. Depend on Uline – your #1 source of facilities maintenance and janitorial supplies.
- Hazmat Sorbents
Soaks up spills of corrosive
liquids, acids & bases.
- Hi-Vis Sorbents
Prevent accidental falls on docks,
and in kitchens & machine shops.
- Battery Acid Spill Kit
For quick response to leaking or
spilled battery acid.
- Sorbent Disposal Bags
Safely dispose of sorbents &
other hazardous materials.
- Hazmat Sorbents
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On April 7, 1931, the first Gladewater oil well blew in. It was located one mile (1.6 km) outside town in the Sabine River bottom. Oil production led to a population increase during the 1930s from about 500 to around 8,000 people. In 1940, after the oil boom, Gladewater had a population of 4,454.
On April 7, 1931, the first Gladewater oil well blew in. It was located one mile outside town in the Sabine River bottom. Oil production led to a population increase during the 1930s from about 500 persons to around 8,000. In 1940, after the oil boom, Gladewater had a population of 4,454.
Oct 4, 2023 · On April 7, 1931, the first Gladewater oil well blew in. It was located one mile outside town in the Sabine River bottom. Oil production led to a population increase during the 1930s from about 500 persons to around 8,000. In 1940, after the oil boom, Gladewater had a population of 4,454.
On April 7, 1931, the first Gladewater oil well blew in. It was located one mile outside town in the Sabine River bottom. Oil production led to a population increase during the 1930s from about 500 persons to around 8,000. In 1940, after the oil boom, Gladewater had a population of 4,454.
"Up until the “greatest boom this country had ever seen”, Gladewater had been a small farming community with a population of around 500. However, the discovery of oil in East Texas, the population grew almost overnight to 10,000.
A lot has changed for Gladewater since the first oil boom. Once known as the hub of the east Texas oil field, the city now considers itself the region’s antique capital and it has the shops to prove it.
In the early 20th century, Gladewater was an oil boom town. Gladewater is also known as the “Antique Capital of East Texas,” and with its National Main Street designation it is uniquely a downtown main street district worth seeing.