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23.1 The Birth of the Oil Industry. Search for Oil. The demand for oil had risen dramatically after scientists had developed kerosene in the mid-1800’s. Petroleum is a dark thick liquid fossil fuel Fossil fuel is a fuel formed underground from plant and animal remains. The Search for Oil.
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Search for Oil • The demand for oil had risen dramatically after scientists had developed kerosene in the mid-1800’s. • Petroleum is a dark thick liquid fossil fuel • Fossil fuel is a fuel formed underground from plant and animal remains.
The Search for Oil • The first major U. S. oil strike occurred in the late 1850’s. • An oil company sent Edwin Drake to NW Pennsylvania to search for oil. • One day when the drill reached 69 feet, a black liquid oozed out of the well. • Local farmers ran through a nearby town shouting “The Yankee has struck oil!”
The Search for Oil • Drake’s success led others to search for oil. • Lyne T. Barret, a Civil War veteran, drilled for oil outside Nacogdoches and struck oil at 106 feet. • George Dullnig accidentally struck oil while drilling for water in Bexar County.
The Search for Oil • In 1894, drillers searching for water in Corsicana struck oil. • Corsicana was now dotted with oil derricks and produced 1,450 barrels of oil in 1896. • To process the oil, business leaders constructed refineries.
The Spindletop Strike • Patillo Higgins, a brick factory owner believed that oil would be found under a salt dome on Spindletop Hill (or Big Hill) • A salt dome is an underground formation that often trap oil and natural gases.
The Spindletop Strike • Higgins ran an advertisement calling for a drilling engineer and Anthony Lucas responded. • He agreed that oil was probably beneath Spindletop Hill. • He started drilling there in June 1900 and found traces of oil, but his equipment was not strong enough to continue
The Spindletop Strike • After finding business leaders willing to invest in new equipment, Lucas continued drilling. • On January 10, 1901, Lucas struck oil. • Over the next nine days some 800,000 barrels of oil shot out of Spindletop until workers could cap the gusher. • It could be seen 10 miles away.
Boom and Bust after Spindletop • The discovery of oil at Spindletop led to a boom in the Texas economy and created many jobs. • Spindletop oil production peaked in 1902 at more than 17 million barrels of oil. • That year 20% of the oil produced in the U.S. came from Spindletop.
Boom and Bust after Spindletop. • The discovery of this huge oil field soon affected oil prices • With large quantities of oil being produced the supply of oil outpaced the national demand. • As a result the price of oil dropped. • The rush of oil companies drilling oil at Spindletop also drained its oil reserves.
Boom and Bust at Spindletop • Most companies formed went out of business when their wells dried up. • Of those companies that survived, several grew into large businesses. • The Texas Company became Texaco • The Magnolia Petroleum Company and the Humble Oil Company were bought by the Standard Oil Company. • J.M. Guffey, A.W. Mellon and R.B. Mellon founded the Gulf Oil Company. • These companies employed thousands of Texans and boosted the state’s economy