History Of The Petroleum Industry In The United States
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The history of the petroleum industry in the United States goes back to the early 19th century, although the indigenous peoples, like many ancient societies, have used petroleum seeps since prehistoric times; where found, these seeps signaled the growth of the industry from the earliest discoveries to the more recent. Petroleum became a major industry following the oil discovery at Oil Creek, Pennsylvania, in 1859. For much of the 19th and 20th centuries, the US was the largest oil producing country in the world. US regained the position of the largest oil producing country in the world in 2018 and has it kept every year since as of 2022.


19th century


Before the Drake well

Native Americans had known of the oil in western Pennsylvania, and had made some use of it for many years before the mid-19th century. Early European explorers noted seeps of oil and natural gas in western Pennsylvania and New York. Interest grew substantially in the mid-1850s as scientists reported on the potential to manufacture kerosene from crude oil, if a sufficiently large oil supply could be found. The Jesuit Relations of 1657 states: Salt was a valuable commodity, and an industry developed near salt springs in the
Ohio River The Ohio River is a long river in the United States. It is located at the boundary of the Midwestern and Southern United States, flowing southwesterly from western Pennsylvania to its mouth on the Mississippi River at the southern tip of Illino ...
Valley, producing salt by evaporating brine from the springs.
Salt wells A salt well (or brine well) is used to mine salt from caverns or deposits. Water is used as a solution to dissolve the salt or halite deposits so that they can be extracted by pipe to an evaporation process, which results in a brine or dry prod ...
were sunk at the salt springs to increase the supply of brine for evaporation. Some of the wells were hand-dug, but salt producers also learned to drill wells by percussion (cable tool) methods. In a number of locations in western Virginia, Ohio, and Kentucky, oil and natural gas came up the wells along with the brine. The oil was mostly a nuisance, but some salt producers saved it and sold it as illuminating oil or medicine. In some locations, enough natural gas was produced to be used as fuel for the salt evaporating pans. Early salt brine wells that produced byproduct oil included the
Thorla-McKee Well The Thorla-McKee Well in Noble County, Ohio was the first petroleum, oil-producing well in North America according to the Ohio Historical Society. Dedicated in 1992 by the Noble County Department of Tourism and the Ohio Historical Society, a desig ...
of Ohio in 1814, a well near Burkesville, Kentucky, in 1828, and wells at Burning Springs, West Virginia, by 1836. The US natural gas industry started in 1821 at Fredonia,
Chautauqua County, New York Chautauqua County is the westernmost County (United States), county in the U.S. state of New York (state), New York. As of the United States Census 2020, 2020 census, the population was 127,657. Its county seat is Mayville, New York, Mayville, an ...
, when William Hart dug a well to a depth of into gas-bearing shale, then drilled a borehole further, and piped the natural gas to a nearby inn where it was burned for illumination. Soon many gas wells were drilled in the area, and the gas-lit streets of Fredonia became a tourist attraction.


Drake well, Titusville, Pennsylvania

On August 27, 1859, George Bissell and Edwin L. Drake made the first successful use of a drilling rig on a well drilled especially to produce oil, at a site on Oil Creek near Titusville, Pennsylvania. The Drake partners were encouraged by Benjamin Silliman (1779-1864), a chemistry professor at Yale, who tested a sample of the oil, and assured them that it could be distilled into useful products such as illuminating oil. The Drake well is often referred to as the first "commercial oil well." Before the Drake well, oil-producing wells in the United States were wells that were drilled for salt brine, and produced oil and gas only as accidental byproducts. Historians have noted that the importance of the Drake well was not in being the first well to produce oil, but in attracting the first great wave of investment in oil drilling, refining, and marketing: :"The importance of the Drake well was in the fact that it caused prompt additional drilling, thus establishing a supply of petroleum in sufficient quantity to support business enterprises of magnitude.


Appalachian Basin

The success of the Drake well quickly led to oil drilling in other locations in the western Appalachian mountains, where oil was seeping to the surface, or where salt drillers had previously found oil fouling their salt wells. During the American Civil War, the oil-producing region spread over much of western Pennsylvania, up into western
New York New York most commonly refers to: * New York City, the most populous city in the United States, located in the state of New York * New York (state), a state in the northeastern United States New York may also refer to: Film and television * '' ...
state, and down the
Ohio River The Ohio River is a long river in the United States. It is located at the boundary of the Midwestern and Southern United States, flowing southwesterly from western Pennsylvania to its mouth on the Mississippi River at the southern tip of Illino ...
valley into the states of Ohio, Kentucky, and the western part of Virginia (now West Virginia). The Appalachian Basin continued to be the leading oil-producing region in the United States through 1904. The first commercial oil well in New York was drilled in 1865. New York's (and Northwestern Pennsylvania) crude oil is very high in paraffin. The principal product of the oil in the 19th century was kerosene, which quickly replaced whale oil for illuminating purposes in the United States. Originally dealing in whale oil which was widely used for illumination, Charles Pratt (1830–1891) of Massachusetts was an early pioneer of the natural oil industry in the United States. He was founder of Astral Oil Works in the Greenpoint section of Brooklyn, New York. Pratt's product later gave rise to the slogan, "''The holy lamps of Tibet are primed with Astral Oil''." He joined with his protégé Henry H. Rogers to form Charles Pratt and Company in 1867. Both companies became part of John D. Rockefeller's
Standard Oil Standard Oil Company, Inc., was an American oil production, transportation, refining, and marketing company that operated from 1870 to 1911. At its height, Standard Oil was the largest petroleum company in the world, and its success made its co-f ...
in 1874.


Lima-Indiana District


Mid-Continent

The Mid-continent area is an area generally including Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, North Louisiana and the part of Texas away from the Gulf Coast. The first commercially successful oil well drilled in Kansas was the Norman No. 1 near Neodesha, Kansas, on November 28, 1892. * Corsicana, Texas, 1894, Texas, plus *McCamey, 1928, Baker No. 1., Texas.


Oklahoma

Oil was discovered at Bartlesville and
Burbank Burbank may refer to: Places Australia * Burbank, Queensland, a suburb in Brisbane United States * Burbank, California, a city in Los Angeles County * Burbank, Santa Clara County, California, a census-designated place * Burbank, Illinois, ...
in 1897. But the initial discoveries created no great excitement until the discovery gusher of the Glenn Pool in 1905. The Glenn discovery came when Gulf Coast production was declining rapidly, and the operators were eager for new areas to drill. The increased drilling resulted in major discoveries at Cushing in 1912 and
Healdton Healdton is a city in Carter County, Oklahoma, United States. The population was 2,788 at the 2010 census. It is part of the Ardmore, Oklahoma Micropolitan Statistical Area. History A post office was established at Healdton, Indian Territory ...
in 1913. * Greater Seminole, 1926, Oklahoma, plus * Oklahoma City, No. 1 Discovery Well, 1928, Oklahoma. The Mary Sudik No. 1, ''"Wild Mary Sudik"'', gusher did not blow until March 25, 1930—she sprayed an estimated an hour (133 L/s) for the next 11 days.


East Texas

The largest oil field in the lower 48 states, the East Texas oil field, was not discovered until 1930, when wildcatter
Columbus Marion Joiner Columbus Marion Joiner, nicknamed Dad Joiner (March 12, 1860 – March 27, 1947), was an American oilman who at the age of seventy drilled the discovery well of the East Texas Oil Field of the 1930s. Newspaper articles referred to Joiner as ...
(more commonly known as "Dad" Joiner) drilled the Daisy Bradford No. 3 well, in Rusk County, Texas.


North Louisiana

In 1906, the Caddo-Pine Island Field in northern Caddo Parish, Louisiana was discovered, and a rush of leasing and drilling activity ensued. In 1908, the first natural gas pipeline was constructed to transport gas from Caddo-Pine Island to Shreveport, Louisiana. This was one of the earliest commercial uses of natural gas, which was commonly viewed as an undesirable by-product of oil production and often "flared" or burnt off at the well site. Other innovations in the Caddo-Pine Island Field included the first over-water oil platform, which was constructed in the field on Caddo Lake in 1910. In that same year, a major oil pipeline was constructed from Caddo-Pine Island Field to a refinery built and operated by Standard Oil Company of Louisiana in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The refinery continues to operate today. Other early petroleum discoveries in North Louisiana included the Bull Bayou Field, Red River Parish, Louisiana (1913), Monroe Gas Field, Ouachita Parish, Louisiana (1916), Homer Field, Claiborne Parish, Louisiana (1919) and Haynesville Field, Claiborne Parish, Louisiana (1921).


California

Native Americans had known of the tar seeps in southern California for thousands of years, and used the tar to waterproof their canoes. Spanish settlers also knew of the seeps, such as at Rancho La Brea (Spanish for ''Tar Ranch'') in present-day Los Angeles, from which the priests obtained tar to waterproof the roofs of the Los Angeles and San Gabriel missions. Despite the abundance of well-known seeps in southern California, the first commercial oil well in California was drilled in Humboldt County, northern California in 1865. Some attempts were made in the 1860s to exploit oil deposits under tar seeps in the
Ventura Basin Ventura (Italian language, Italian, Portuguese language, Portuguese and Spanish language, Spanish for "fortune") may refer to: Places ; Brazil * Boa Ventura de São Roque, a municipality in the state of Paraná, southern Brazil * Boa Ventura, ...
of Ventura County and northeastern
Los Angeles county Los Angeles County, officially the County of Los Angeles, and sometimes abbreviated as L.A. County, is the most populous county in the United States and in the U.S. state of California, with 9,861,224 residents estimated as of 2022. It is the ...
. The early efforts failed because of complex geology, and, more importantly, because the refining techniques then available could not manufacture high-quality kerosene from California crude oil, which differed chemically from Pennsylvania crude oil. Most California crude oil in the early years was turned into the less lucrative products of fuel oil and asphalt. Oil production in the Los Angeles Basin started with the discovery of the Brea-Olinda Oil Field in 1880, and continued with the development of the Los Angeles City Oil Field in 1893, the Beverly Hills Oil Field in 1900, the Salt Lake Oil Field in 1902, and many others. The discovery of the Long Beach Oil Field in 1921, which proved to be the world's richest in production per-acre of the time, increased the importance of the Los Angeles Basin as a worldwide oil producer. This increased again with the discovery of the Wilmington Oil Field in 1932, and the development of the Port of Los Angeles as a means of shipping crude oil overseas.Schmitt, R. J., Dugan, J. E., and M. R. Adamson. "Industrial Activity and Its Socioeconomic Impacts: Oil and Three Coastal California Counties." MMS OCS Study 2002-049. Coastal Research Center, Marine Science Institute, University of California, Santa Barbara, California. MMS Cooperative Agreement Number 14-35-01-00-CA-31603. 244 pages; p. 44ff. Production in Santa Barbara County began in the 1890s with the development of the Summerland Oil Field, which included the world's first offshore oil wells. With the discovery of the
Orcutt Orcutt is an unincorporated town and census-designated place located in the Santa Maria Valley in Santa Barbara County, California, United States. Orcutt is named for William Warren Orcutt, the manager of the Geological, Land and Engineering Dep ...
and Lompoc fields, northern Santa Barbara County became a regional center of production; towns such as
Orcutt Orcutt is an unincorporated town and census-designated place located in the Santa Maria Valley in Santa Barbara County, California, United States. Orcutt is named for William Warren Orcutt, the manager of the Geological, Land and Engineering Dep ...
owe their existence to the quickly growing industry. Oil in the San Joaquin Basin was first discovered at the Coalinga field in 1890. By 1901, the San Joaquin Basin was the main oil-producing region of California, and it remains so in the 21st century, with huge oil fields including the
Midway-Sunset The Midway-Sunset Oil Field is a large oil field in Kern County, San Joaquin Valley, California in the United States. It is the largest known oilfield in California and the third largest in the United States. The field was discovered in 1894, ...
, Kern River, and Belridge fields producing much of California's onshore oil.


Rocky Mountains

The first commercial oil well in the Rocky Mountains was drilled near
Cañon City, Colorado Cañon City is a home rule municipality that is the county seat and the most populous municipality of Fremont County, Colorado, United States. The city population was 17,141 at the 2020 United States Census. Cañon City is the principal city of t ...
in 1862. The wells in the Cañon City-Florence field, drilled near surface oil seeps, produced from fractures in the Pierre Shale. * Bighorn Basin * Denver Basin * Green River Basin * North Park (Colorado basin) *
Paradox Basin The Paradox Basin is an asymmetric foreland basin located mostly in southeast Utah and southwest Colorado, but extending into northeast Arizona and northwest New Mexico. The basin is a large elongate northwest to southeast oriented depression ...
* Piceance Basin * Powder River Basin * Raton Basin * San Juan Basin * Uinta Basin


Alaska

A Russian sea captain noted oil seeps along the shore of the Cook Inlet as early as 1853, and oil drilling began in 1898 in a number of locations along the southern coast of Alaska. Production was relatively small, however, until huge discoveries were made on Alaska's remote
North Slope North Slope can refer to: * Alaska North Slope, a region encompassing the northernmost part of the U.S. state of Alaska * North Slope Borough, Alaska, a borough in Alaska whose boundaries roughly coincide with that of the region * North Slope, Tac ...
. Petroleum seeps on the North Slope have been known for many years, and in 1923, the federal government created US Naval Petroleum Reserve No. 4 to cover the presumed oil fields beneath the seeps. Some exploration drilling was done in the reserve during World War II and the 1950s, but the remote location deterred intensive exploration until the 1960s. The Prudhoe Bay Oil Field, the largest oil field in the United States in terms of total oil produced, was discovered in 1968. Production began in 1977, following completion of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline. Through 2005, the field has produced of oil (an average of 1.5 million barrels/day), and is estimated to contain another of economically recoverable oil.


Brooklyn, New York

In the late 1800s, a number of oil refineries were concentrated in the Greenpoint area of Brooklyn, beginning with Astral Oil Works in 1867. In the 1970s, the
Greenpoint oil spill The Greenpoint oil spill is one of the largest oil spills ever recorded in the United States. Located around Newtown Creek in the Greenpoint neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York City, between of oil and petroleum products have leaked into the soi ...
was discovered, one of the largest spills in the history of the United States.


20th century


Gulf Coast

Capt. Anthony Francis Lucas, an experienced mining engineer and salt driller, drilled a well to find oil at
Spindletop Spindletop is an oil field located in the southern portion of Beaumont, Texas, in the United States. The Spindletop dome was derived from the Louann Salt evaporite layer of the Jurassic geologic period. On January 10, 1901, a well at Spindleto ...
Hill. On the morning of January 10, 1901, the little hill south of
Beaumont, Texas Beaumont is a coastal city in the U.S. state of Texas. It is the county seat, seat of government of Jefferson County, Texas, Jefferson County, within the Beaumont–Port Arthur, Texas, Port Arthur Beaumont–Port Arthur metropolitan area, metropo ...
began to tremble and mud bubbled up over the rotary table. A low rumbling sound came from underground, and then, with a force that shot 6 tons of 4-inch (100 mm) diameter pipe out over the top of the derrick, knocking off the crown block, the Lucas Gusher roared in and the Spindletop oil field was born. Spindletop became the focus of frenzied drilling; oil production from the field peaked in 1902 at , but by 1905 production had declined 90% from the peak. Spindletop Hill turned out to be the surface expression of an underground salt dome, around which the oil accumulated. The Spindletop gusher started serious oil exploration of the Gulf Coast in Texas and Louisiana, an area that had previously been dismissed by oil men. Other salt dome mounds were quickly drilled, resulting in discoveries at
Sour Lake Sour Lake is a city in Hardin County, Texas, United States. The population was 1,773 at the 2020 census. It was originally named "Sour Lake Springs", after the sulphurous spring water that flowed into the nearby lake. The city is part of the Beau ...
(1902),
Batson Batson is a patronymic surname, derived from Bartholomew. It may refer to: * Benjamin Batson (1942-1996), American academic and historian * Brendon Batson, English soccer player * Cameron Batson (born 1995), American football player * Daniel B ...
(1904) and Humble (1905). The
Standard Oil Company Standard Oil Company, Inc., was an American oil production, transportation, refining, and marketing company that operated from 1870 to 1911. At its height, Standard Oil was the largest petroleum company in the world, and its success made its co-f ...
was slow to appreciate the economic potential of the Spindletop oil field, and the Gulf Coast generally, which gave greater opportunity to others; Spindletop became the birthplace of oil giants Texaco and Gulf Oil. Although in 1899 Standard Oil controlled more than 85% of the oil production in the older oil regions in the Appalachian Basin and the Lima-Indiana trend, it never controlled more than 10% of the oil production in the new Gulf Coast province.


Federal price regulation

By the Natural Gas Act of 1938, the federal government imposed price controls on natural gas in interstate commerce. The
Federal Power Commission The Federal Power Commission (FPC) was an independent commission of the United States government, originally organized on June 23, 1930, with five members nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate. The FPC was originally created in 1 ...
was mandated to set interstate gas prices at "just and reasonable" rates. The FPC at first only regulated the price at which pipelines sold gas to utilities and industry, but later put limits on the wellhead price of gas sold to an interstate pipeline. Gas producers challenged the controls, but lost in the Supreme Court in Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Wisconsin (1954). The federal government had controlled the price of natural gas that crossed state lines, but not of gas produced and sold within a state. In the 1970s, the low interstate price set by the federal government caused supply shortages of gas in consuming states, because gas producers sold as much as they could of their product for higher prices in the local markets within gas-producing states. In the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978, the federal government extended price controls to all natural gas in the country. At the same time, the government created a complex price system in which the price paid to the producer depended on the date the well was drilled, the depth of the well, the geological formation, the distance to other gas wells, and several other factors. The price system was an attempt to keep the average price low while encouraging new production. The last federal price controls on natural gas were removed by the Natural Gas Decontrol Act of 1989, which phased out the last remaining price control as of 1 January 1993.


Technology

Hydraulic fracturing Fracking (also known as hydraulic fracturing, hydrofracturing, or hydrofracking) is a well stimulation technique involving the fracturing of bedrock formations by a pressurized liquid. The process involves the high-pressure injection of "frack ...
experiments began in the 1940s in the United States. Massive hydraulic fracturing, generally involving injecting over 150 short tons, or approximately 300,000 pounds (136 metric tonnes), of proppant, was first applied by
Pan American Petroleum The Pan American Petroleum and Transport Company (PAT) was an oil company founded in 1916 by the American oil tycoon Edward L. Doheny after he had made a huge oil strike in Mexico. Pan American profited from fuel demand during World War I, and fro ...
in
Stephens County, Oklahoma Stephens County is a county located in the U.S. state of Oklahoma. As of the 2010 census, the population was 45,048. Its county seat is Duncan. The county was created at statehood, partly from the Chickasaw Nation in Indian Territory and partl ...
, USA in 1968.Ben E. Law and Charles W. Spencer, 1993, "Gas in tight reservoirs-an emerging major source of energy," ''in'' David G. Howell (ed.), ''The Future of Energy Gasses'', US Geological Survey, Professional Paper 1570, p.233-252. By the 1970s, massive hydraulic fracturing was employed in Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom in the North Sea. Hydraulic fracturing operations have grown exponentially since the mid-1990s, when technologic advances and increases in the price of natural gas made this technique economically viable. Oil rig technology advanced rapidly in the 20th century, with many innovations made by US companies operating in the Gulf of Mexico. The first
jackup oil rig A jackup rig or a self-elevating unit is a type of mobile platform that consists of a buoyant hull fitted with a number of movable legs, capable of raising its hull over the surface of the sea. The buoyant hull enables transportation of the unit a ...
was used in the Gulf of Mexico in 1954.


Environmental Impact

A number of major environmental incidents in the United States in the 20th Century are linked to the petroleum industry. In 1910, the
Lakeview Gusher The Lakeview Gusher was an eruption of hydrocarbons from a pressurized oil well in the Midway-Sunset Oil Field in Kern County, California, in 1910. It created the largest accidental oil spill in history, lasting 18 months and releasing of crude ...
in Kern County, California was a well blowout that created the largest accidental oil spill in history. The
1969 Santa Barbara oil spill The Santa Barbara oil spill occurred in January and February 1969 in the Santa Barbara Channel, near the city of Santa Barbara in Southern California. It was the largest oil spill in United States waters by that time, and now ranks third after ...
occurred in the Santa Barbara Channel, near the city of Santa Barbara in Southern California. It was the largest oil spill in United States waters by that time, and now ranks third after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon and 1989 Exxon Valdez spills. It remains the largest oil spill to have occurred in the waters off California. The public outrage engendered by the spill, which received prominent media coverage in the United States, resulted in numerous pieces of environmental legislation within the next several years, legislation that forms the legal and regulatory framework for the modern environmental movement in the U.S.Clarke, K. C. and Jeffrey J. Hemphill (2002) The Santa Barbara Oil Spill, A Retrospective. ''Yearbook of the Association of Pacific Coast Geographers'', Editor Darrick Danta, University of Hawai'i Press, vol. 64, pp. 157–162. Availabl
The Santa Barbara Oil Spill: A Retrospective
/ref> The 1989
Exxon Valdez oil spill The ''Exxon Valdez'' oil spill occurred in Prince William Sound, Alaska, on March 24, 1989. ''Exxon Valdez'', an oil supertanker owned by Exxon Shipping Company bound for Long Beach, California struck Prince William Sound's Bligh Reef, west o ...
off the coast of Alaska was the largest spill in US waters up to that date, as of 2020 only exceeded by the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill, in terms of volume released. In 2010 the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico became the largest marine oil spill in the history of the petroleum industry. Beginning in 2004, the Taylor oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico continues as of 2020. The 20th Century has also seen major refinery fires including the 1956
McKee refinery fire The McKee refinery tank explosion and fire on Sunday, July 29, 1956, was an explosion and severe fire-related mass casualty event, killing 19 firefighters. The fire is considered to have the fourth (the September 11 attacks being first) most casua ...
, the
1975 Philadelphia Gulf refinery fire A refinery owned by Gulf Oil Corporation in Philadelphia, located at Girard Point on the Schuylkill River in South Philadelphia, caught fire on Sunday, August 17, 1975. This incident grew into an 11-alarm fire, not brought under control until 24 ...
and 2005 Texas City Refinery explosion.


21st century


North Dakota

The
North Dakota oil boom The North Dakota oil boom refers to the period of rapidly expanding oil extraction from the Bakken Formation in the state of North Dakota that lasted from the discovery of Parshall Oil Field in 2006, and peaked in 2012, but with substantially less g ...
, lasting from 2006 to 2015, involved rapidly expanding oil extraction from the
Bakken formation The Bakken Formation () is a rock unit from the Late Devonian to Early Mississippian age occupying about of the subsurface of the Williston Basin, underlying parts of Montana, North Dakota, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. The formation was initi ...
in the state of North Dakota. The boom began with the discovery of
Parshall Oil Field The Parshall Oil Field is an oil field producing from the Bakken Formation and Three Forks Formation near the town of Parshall, in Mountrail County, North Dakota. The field is in the Williston Basin. The field was discovered in 2006 by Michael J ...
in 2006, and peaked in 2012, but with substantially less growth noted since 2015 due to a global decline in oil prices. The boom relied upon horizontal drilling and
hydraulic fracturing Fracking (also known as hydraulic fracturing, hydrofracturing, or hydrofracking) is a well stimulation technique involving the fracturing of bedrock formations by a pressurized liquid. The process involves the high-pressure injection of "frack ...
to recover oil from tight oil deposits.The facts about fracking. (2011, June 25). The Wall Street Journal.


Keystone Pipeline

Commissioned in 2010, the Keystone Pipeline is an
oil pipeline Pipeline transport is the long-distance transportation of a liquid or gas through a system of pipes—a pipeline—typically to a market area for consumption. The latest data from 2014 gives a total of slightly less than of pipeline in 120 countr ...
system in Canada and the United States, as of 2019 owned solely by TC Energy. It runs from the Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin in Alberta to refineries in Illinois and Texas, and also to oil
tank farms A tank is an armoured fighting vehicle intended as a primary offensive weapon in front-line ground combat. Tank designs are a balance of heavy firepower, strong armour, and good battlefield mobility provided by tracks and a powerful en ...
and an oil pipeline distribution center in Cushing, Oklahoma. The pipeline became well known when a planned fourth phase, Keystone XL, attracted opposition from environmentalists, becoming a symbol of the battle over climate change and fossil fuels.


See also

*
The Seven Sisters ''The Seven Sisters'' is an accessory for the 2nd edition of the ''Advanced Dungeons & Dragons'' fantasy role-playing game, published in 1995. ''The Seven Sisters'' details the fictional characters known as the Seven Sisters of the Forgotten R ...
, and its modern equivalent Big Oil *
Offshore oil and gas in the United States Offshore oil and gas in the United States provides a large portion of the nation’s oil and gas supply. Large oil and gas reservoirs are found under the sea offshore from Louisiana, Texas, California, and Alaska. Environmental concerns have p ...
* Oil industry * Petroleum industry in the United States *
History of ExxonMobil ExxonMobil, an American multinational oil and gas corporation presently based out of Texas, has had one of the longest histories of any company in its industry. A direct descendant of John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil, the company traces its root ...
**
Petroleum refining in the United States Petroleum refining in the United States in 2013 produced 18.9 million barrels per day of refined petroleum products, more than any other country. Although the US was the world's largest net importer of refined petroleum products as recently as 2 ...


References


Further reading

* Beaubouef, Bruce A. ''The Strategic Petroleum Reserve : U.S. Energy Security and Oil Politics, 1975-2005'' (Texas A&M University Press 2007) * Black, Brian. '' Petrolia: The Landscape of America's First Oil Boom'' (Johns Hopkins UP, 2000) * Clarke, Jeanne Nienaber. ''Roosevelt's Warrior: Harold L. Ickes and the New Deal'' (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996); on oil in 1930s. * Dedmon, Emmett. ''Challenge and response: a modern history of the Standard Oil Company (Indiana)'' (1984
online
* Frehner, Brian. ''Finding Oil: The Nature of Petroleum Geology, 1859-1920'' (U of Nebraska Press, 2011). * Hidy, Ralph, et al. ''History of Standard Oil Company (New Jersey)'' (1955
online vol 1
** Larson, Henrietta M. et al. ''History of Standard Oil Company (New Jersey): New Horizons, 1927-1950'' (1955
online vol 2
* Nevins, Alan. ''John D. Rockefeller The Heroic Age Of American Enterprise'' (1940); 710pp; favorable scholarly biography
online
on Standard Oil to 1900. * Olien, Roger M., Diana Davids Hinton, and Diana Davids Olien. ''Oil and ideology: The cultural creation of the American petroleum industry'' (Univ of North Carolina Press, 2000). * Painter, David S. "Oil and the American century." ''Journal of American History'' 99.1 (2012): 24-39
online
* Petzinger, Thomas. ''Oil & honor : the Texaco-Pennzoil wars'' (1987
online
features J Paul Getty. * Priest, Tyler. ''Offshore Imperative : Shell Oil's Search for Petroleum in Postwar America'' (Texas A&M University Press 2007). * Prindle, David F. ''Petroleum politics and the Texas Railroad Commission'' (1985
online
* Tait Jr, Samuel W. ''The wildcatters: An informal history of oil-hunting in America'' (2018). * United States. Bureau of Land Management, ''National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska integrated activity plan and environmental impact statement'' (2020
online
* Vassiliou, Marius. ''Historical Dictionary of the Petroleum Industry'' (2nd edition. Rowman and Littlefield-Scarecrow Press, 2018), 593 p. * Wall, Bennett H. et al. ''Growth in a changing environment : a history of Standard Oil Company (New Jersey), Exxon Corporation, 1950-1975'' (1988
online
* Weber, Dickinson. ''A comparison of two oil city business centers (Odessa-Midland, Texas)'' (1958
online
* White, Gerald Taylor. ''Formative years in the Far West : a history of Standard Oil Company of California and predecessors through 1919'' (1962
online
* Williamson, Harold F., Ralph L. Andreano, and Carmen Menezes. "The American Petroleum Industry." in ''Output, Employment, and Productivity in the United States after 1800'' (NBER, 1966) pp. 349–404
online
* Williamson, Harold F., and Arnold R. Daum. ''The American Petroleum Industry: The Age of Illumination, 1859—1899'' (1959) ** Williamson, Harold F., Ralph L. Andreano, Arnold R. Daum, and Gilbert C. Kiose; ''The American Petroleum Industry: The Age of Energy, 1900—1959'' (1964); a standard scholarly history
vol 1 online
also se
vol 2 online


International

* Black, Brian C. ''Crude reality: petroleum in world history'' (Rowman & Littlefield, 2020). * Corley, T. A. B. "Oil corporations and public policy: A US-UK comparison, 1900-1975." ''Business and Economic History'' (1992): 138-146
online
* Grace, Robert. ''Oil - An Overview of the Petroleum Industry'' (2007) * Graf, Rüdiger. ''Oil and sovereignty: petro-knowledge and energy policy in the United States and western Europe in the 1970s'' (Berghahn Books, 2018). * Graf, Rüdiger. "Claiming sovereignty in the oil crisis" project independence" and global interdependence in the United States, 1973/74." ''Historical Social Research/Historische Sozialforschung'' (2014): 43-69
online
* Graf, Rüdiger. "The Energy Crises of the 1970s: Anticipations and Reactions in the Industrialized World" Ed. Frank Bösch. (GESIS, Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, 2014
online
* Klare, Michael T. "Oil, Iraq, and American foreign policy: the continuing salience of the Carter doctrine." ''International Journal'' 62.1 (2007): 31-42. * Offiler, Ben. ''US Foreign Policy and the Modernization of Iran: Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon and the Shah'' (Springer, 2015). * Painter, David S. "Oil and geopolitics: the oil crises of the 1970s and the Cold War." ''Historical Social Research/Historische Sozialforschung'' (2014): 186-20
online
* Rabe, Stephen G. ''The road to OPEC: United States relations with Venezuela, 1919-1976'' (University of Texas Press, 2011) * Salas, Miguel Tinker. "Staying the course: United States oil companies in Venezuela, 1945–1958." ''Latin American Perspectives'' 32.2 (2005): 147-170. * Salas, Miguel Tinker. "US oil companies in Venezuela: The forging of an enduring alliance." in ''Venezuela: Hugo Chávez and the Decline of an 'exceptional Democracy' '' (2006): 35+. * Vassiliou, Marius S. ''Historical dictionary of the petroleum industry'' (Rowman & Littlefield, 2018). * Vassiliou, Marius S. and Miryusif Mirbabayev. ''US and Azerbaijani oil in the Nineteenth Century: Two Titans'' (Lexington Books, 2022). - 259 p. * Watts, Michael J. "Righteous oil? Human rights, the oil complex, and corporate social responsibility." ''Annual Review of Environment and Resources'' 30 (2005): 373-407
online


External links


American Oil and Gas Historical Society

Handbook of Texas Online: ''Oil and gas industry''


{{DEFAULTSORT:History Of The Petroleum Industry In The United States