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  2. Pennsylvania oil rush - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_oil_rush

    Pennsylvania oil production peaked in 1891, when the state produced 31 million barrels of oil, 58% of the nation's oil that year. But 1892 was the last year that Pennsylvania wells provided a majority of the oil produced in the US, and in 1895, Ohio surpassed Pennsylvania as an oil producer.

  3. Joseph S. Cullinan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_S._Cullinan

    Joseph Stephen Cullinan (December 31, 1860 – March 11, 1937) was a U.S. oil industrialist. Although he was a native of Pennsylvania, his lifetime business endeavors would help shape the early phase of the oil industry in Texas. He founded The Texas Company, which would eventually be known as Texaco Incorporated.

  4. Charles Pratt and Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Pratt_and_Company

    Pratt became a pioneer of the natural oil industry, and established his kerosene refinery Astral Oil Works in Brooklyn. Pratt's product later gave rise to the slogan, "The holy lamps of Tibet are primed with Astral Oil." [citation needed] In the mid-1860s, Pratt met two aspiring young men, Charles Ellis and Henry H. Rogers in western Pennsylvania.

  5. Charles Pratt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Pratt

    [citation needed] Pratt realized that whale oil could be replaced by petroleum ("natural oil") distillates to light lamps. He became a pioneer of the petroleum industry as new wells were established during the 1860s in western Pennsylvania. [2] In the 1860s, he founded his kerosene refinery, Astral Oil Works, in Brooklyn, New York. One ...

  6. Michael Late Benedum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Late_Benedum

    Michael Late Benedum (July 16, 1869 – July 30, 1959) was a wealthy businessman from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, who made his fortune in the oil and natural gas industry in the early 20th century. Benedum accumulated immense wealth and became one of the richest men in America.

  7. James M. Guffey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_M._Guffey

    At 18, he found work as a clerk for the Louisville and Nashville Railroad in Louisville, Kentucky, before landing a better-paying job with the Adams Southern Express Company in Nashville, Tennessee. In 1872, he returned to his home state to become a salesman in the burgeoning oil industry (see Pennsylvania oil rush ), learning the business and ...

  8. History of the petroleum industry in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_petroleum...

    Crude oil production Natural oil seeps such as this in the McKittrick area of California were used by the Native Americans and later mined by settlers.. 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 ...

  9. D. Landreth Seed Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D._Landreth_Seed_Company

    [2] [3] In 1818, a store was founded in Charleston, South Carolina, and a second in St. Louis in 1854, which later closed at the start of the Civil War. [1] Landreth and his son David, who joined the company in 1820, were among the founders of the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society in 1827 and produced the first agricultural journal in the ...