White Oak, Texas had 1,900 people when Kelcy Warren grew up there. One school building, kindergarten through 12th grade. Everybody in the same hallways, the same gymnasium, the same cafeteria.
He didn’t realize how unusual that was until he left.
“When I went off to college, I realized, ‘Man, that was special,’” Warren said at a Fletcher Lecture Luncheon at Hardin-Simmons University in Abilene, Texas. “Other people may not have that.”
Warren is the Executive Chairman and co-founder of Energy Transfer, one of the largest midstream energy companies on the continent, with nearly 125,000 miles of pipeline and roughly one-third of the country’s natural gas and crude oil moving through its network. The company posted a record $16 billion in adjusted EBITDA for 2025. But the story of how he got there starts not in a boardroom but in a small East Texas town where the community looked out for its own, and where two parents were shaping a kid without announcing it.
Two Parents and a Lesson in Value
Warren’s father spent his career at Sun Pipeline Company. His mother was president of the PTA the year Warren graduated. His father served as president of the school board. “I was born there, went to grade school,” Warren told the Hardin-Simmons audience. “It was just pretty… I didn’t know it was that special at the time, I do today.”
His father retired making $21,000 a year. Warren didn’t find this out until much later. “I didn’t know that we weren’t wealthy,” he said. “I didn’t know, and we had everything I wanted.”
Every weekend, the two drove into Longview, the county seat, to collect mail from a post office box, since delivery didn’t reach their rural address. Post office steps in those days collected pennies. People buying stamps and not bothering with the change. His dad always had a quarter in his pocket. He would look down at the loose change on the steps and tell his son: “I would never stop to pick up a penny.” Then he’d throw the quarter down. “But I can’t resist 26 cents.”
“To this day I still pick up every penny I see,” Warren said at the lecture.
The dump was another classroom. His father carved them each a stick and announced they were going on a treasure hunt: “one man’s trash is another man’s treasure.” Once, digging through a pile, Warren found a 30-foot heavy-gauge chain buried so deep he couldn’t pull it out himself. His father helped free it. The chain worked. “If he was living today, he’d still be telling that story,” Warren said.
The Home, the Music, and What Gets Absorbed Without Knowing
Warren’s mother ran the house by sound. “I never entered the house where there wasn’t music playing,” he said. It might be The Supremes, it might be something else. The music was simply always on. Warren says he carries that forward today; he’s become heavily involved in the music world, an extension of something that started with his mother’s record player.
The more durable inheritance took shape quietly, absorbed from hundreds of small moments that didn’t feel like lessons at the time.
“We’re constantly learning as humans,” Warren said. “And you can be the way your dad treats somebody with respect or disrespect… It can be all kinds of things that help your mind develop and grow into ultimately who you are.”
Of his own upbringing he was direct: “I felt like I was dealt a pretty good hand. These were good people, good people.”
Then, a beat later: “I was being molded a little bit.”
That molding eventually pointed him toward engineering. A school counselor asked Warren about his plans. The records showed forestry or something like it. Warren had a different question: which four-year degree paid the most? The counselor checked his book. Engineering. Warren enrolled at the University of Texas at Arlington and graduated with a civil engineering degree in 1978. His father had already made clear that financial support ended with the diploma. Warren knew he needed to start earning.
The clarity helped.
Kelcy Warren, inducted into the Hart Energy Hall of Fame in 2023, has spent decades making decisions under pressure: acquiring competitors after the Enron collapse, buying terminals in Europe when others were selling them, and earning data center contracts on the strength of infrastructure no competitor could replicate. Those instincts didn’t emerge from MBA case studies. They were practiced first on post office steps and at the edge of a junk pile, with a carved stick and a father who could spot 26 cents worth of value in a penny someone else had already dismissed.
Energy Transfer is a $16 billion EBITDA company today. White Oak, Texas still has roughly 1,900 people.






