Dan and Farris Wilks

Dan Howard Wilks and Farris Cullen Wilks, also known as the Wilks Brothers, are American petroleum industry businessmen. Sons of a bricklayer, the brothers established Wilks Masonry in 1995. They went on to found an early hydraulic fracking company, Frac Tech, in 2002, and eventually became billionaires. In 2011 they sold their 70% interest in Frac Tech for $3.5 billion. They reside in Cisco in Eastland County east of Abilene, Texas.

Personal lives

Early lives

The brothers sons of a Myrtle and Voy Wilks of Cisco in Eastland County east of Abilene, Texas. When the brothers were born, their father worked as a bricklayer and the family was destitute; the brothers once slept in a goat shed.[1][2]

Assembly of Yahweh (7th day)

In 1947 Voy and Myrtle Wilks along with Myrtle's father Charles Fenter were disfellowshipped from the Churches of Christ and founded a church which was at first called simply “A Church of Christ.” The church is not Christian, believing that Yahweh is the only god and that Jesus (called Yahshuah) is a separate entity. In early 1952 Charles restricted communion to once a year rather than weekly and moved worship from Sunday to Saturday. The Fenters and Wilkses along with a few other families left the congregation and began to meet in private homes. When Charles died in May 1952 Voy took over the congregation and the couple and their five children continued to live at the home of Charles widow Annie.[3]

In 1962 they adopted the name Church of God (7th day), in 1982 the church became the Assembly of Yahweh (7th day).[3] Currently the Assembly of Yahweh (7th day) is a conservative Jews for Jesus-type congregation. It teaches that "the true religion is Jewish (not a Gentile religion)" and its members celebrate the Old Testament holidays rather than those related to the New Testament. The congregation considers the Old Testament historically and scientifically accurate. The congregation considers homosexuality and abortion to be crimes.[4][5]

Farris Wilks

Farris Wilks is married to Jo Ann and the father of 11 children.[4][5] He is the current pastor and bishop of the Assembly of Yahweh (7th day) near Cisco.[3]

Dan Wilks

Dan Wilks is married to Staci and the father of two children with her and four children from a previous marriage.

Frac Tech

In 2002 they founded a hydraulic fracturing company named Frac Tech.[6] In 2011 they sold their 70% interest in Frac Tech for $3.5 billion.[7][8]

Post Frac Tech business history

Idaho Land Purchase and Restrictions

As early as 2016[9] the Wilks Brothers began purchasing large quantities of land in Central Idaho mainly in Ada, Boise, and Valley counties. The Wilks Brothers are known by the locals primarily for restricting access to the locals with gates, anti-vehicle ditches, and no-trespassing signs appearing soon after their acquisition of large parcels throughout Idaho. After acquiring their Valley County properties the Wilks Brothers informed the county that they were terminating their leases to roads and snowmobile trains, including a main road which was the only access to large quantities of public lands.[10] According to the forest service at least some of their restrictions to access are illegal.[11] Land that has been used recreationally and for sustenance purposes by Idahoans for generations is often cut off by these actions. The Wilks Brothers often do not allow locals to hunt, snowmobile, cut firewood, or even traverse their land. This has caused frustration and earned the brothers a negative reputation among the locals.[12] In 2017 a video emerged of an armed and uniformed DF Development security guard illegally expelled an outdoorsman from a public road, Forest Road 409 (Clear Creek Road), which runs through Wilks brothers land on grounds of trespass. According to the Valley County Roads Department Superintendent the DF Development guard was in the wrong as both the road and a 33-foot easement on either side belong to the county and as such are public land.[13]

As of 2019 the Wilks brothers shell company DF Development owned approximately 75,000 acres of land across 306 parcels in Valley County alone. Overall the Wilks brothers own at least 200,000 acres in Idaho.[10]

As of 2018, many of the parcels of land owned by the Wilks Brothers have been listed for sale via Wilks Ranch Brokers, LLC. As of 2019 Wilks Ranch Brokers had listed 54,000 acres of Idaho land for sale.[10]

Montana Land Purchase and Restrictions

The Wilks brothers gained notoriety in Montana for attempting to strong-arm the Bureau of Land Management. After the BLM refused the Wilks’ request to swap a parcel of public land for a piece of their Duffee Hills ranch over the widespread objections of local hunters the Wilks brothers shut down an important access road to the Wild and Scenic Missouri River.[14]

Political activity

They supported Texan U.S. Senator Ted Cruz in the 2016 United States presidential election,[15] contributing $15 million to a super political action committee backing Cruz. They gave $50,000 in 2016 to the candidacy of Jeff Judson, who unsuccessfully challenged fellow Republican Joe Straus, Speaker of the Texas House of Representatives, in the District 121 Republican legislative primary in March 2016.[16] The Wilks Brothers, along with political commentator Ben Shapiro helped launch and fund The Daily Wire, a conservative news and opinion website in 2015.[17] Additionally, the Wilks Brothers are responsible for much of the funding of PragerU, a conservative YouTube channel and media company started by Dennis Prager to further conservative causes.[18] Along with Tim Dunn they are the primary backers of Michael Quinn Sullivan’s Empower Texans who has been involved in horse trading on their behalf with Texas politicians.[19]

gollark: I should get my guesses in.
gollark: GTech™ Containment Site-2910.
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References

  1. Montgomery, Peter (June 13, 2014). "Meet the Billionaire Brothers You Never Heard of Who Fund the Religious Right". American Prospect.
  2. "The 41 Wealthiest Texans: Nos. 40 and 41: Dan Wilks and Farris Wilks: Dan Wilks (57, CISCO): $1.5 BILLION Farris Wilks (61, CISCO): $1.5 BILLION". Texas Monthly.
  3. "Our History". www.halleluyah.org. Assembly of Yahweh (7th day). Retrieved 26 December 2019.
  4. Swan, Betsy (4 January 2016). "Inside the Anti-Gay Church That Loves Kim Davis and Ted Cruz". Retrieved 22 December 2019.
  5. Conlin, Michelle (September 11, 2015). "Special Report: Touting morality, billionaire Texas brothers top 2016 donor list". Retrieved 7 July 2016; includes link to their statement of belief
  6. Durgy, Edwin (September 26, 2011). "The Forbes 400's Newest Undercover Billionaires: The Wilks Brothers". Forbes.
  7. "Billionaires buy up land in Idaho".
  8. Kong, Dinny McMahon And Kanga (2011-05-13). "Frac Tech Got $3.5 Billion". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2016-03-28.
  9. "Texas billionaires limit snowmobile access on Idaho land, reverse course on logging".
  10. Blanchard, Nicole. "Texas billionaires put more Idaho land on the market". www.idahostatesman.com. Idaho Statesman. Retrieved 26 December 2019.
  11. "Forest Service: Wilks brothers' gates on Forest Service road are illegal". KTVB.
  12. "Texas billionaires put gates on popular Forest Service road near Boise". www.idahostatesman.com.
  13. Rodine, Kristin. "Video of run-in revives worries caused by Texas billionaires' Idaho land purchase". www.idahostatesman.com. Idaho Statesman. Retrieved 26 December 2019.
  14. Lundquist, Laura. "Weyerhaeuser selling to timber investment group with Wilks Brothers ties". www.missoulacurrent.com. Missoula Current. Retrieved 26 December 2019.
  15. "Big Money: Billionaire Brothers Give Ted Cruz $15M". The Daily Beast.
  16. David Saleh Rauf, "Mega donors bolster tea party: Billionaire family fuels anti-Straus bid", San Antonio Express-News, January 22, 2016, pp. 1, A8
  17. Stevenson, Seth (January 24, 2018). "The Many Faces of Ben Shapiro". Slate. Retrieved December 28, 2018.
  18. Bernstein, Joseph (March 3, 2018). "How PragerU is winning the Right Wing culture war without Donald Trump". BuzzFeed. Archived from the original on March 11, 2018. Retrieved March 12, 2018.
  19. Hooks, Christopher. "Red Scare: Can Donald Trump Rescue the Texas GOP? Or Is He Part of the Problem?". www.texasmonthly.com. Texas Monthly. Retrieved 26 December 2019.
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