Ida Minerva Tarbell
The History of the Standard Oil Company
(Illustrated)
The Exposure of Immoral and Illegal Business of John D. Rockefeller, the Richest Figure in American History
Published by
Books
- Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -
2019 OK Publishing
EAN 4064066051600
Table of Contents
CHAPTER I THE BIRTH OF AN INDUSTRY
CHAPTER II THE RISE OF THE STANDARD OIL COMPANY
CHAPTER III THE OIL WAR OF 1872
CHAPTER IV "AN UNHOLY ALLIANCE"
CHAPTER V LAYING THE FOUNDATIONS OF A TRUST
CHAPTER VI STRENGTHENING THE FOUNDATIONS
CHAPTER VII THE CRISIS OF 1878
CHAPTER VIII THE COMPROMISE OF 1880
CHAPTER IX THE FIGHT FOR THE SEABOARD PIPE-LINE
CHAPTER XI THE WAR ON THE REBATE
CHAPTER XIII THE STANDARD OIL COMPANY AND POLITICS
CHAPTER XIV THE BREAKING UP OF THE TRUST
CHAPTER XV A MODERN WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE
CHAPTER XVII THE LEGITIMATE GREATNESS OF THE STANDARD OIL COMPANY
CHAPTER ONE
THE BIRTH OF AN INDUSTRY
PETROLEUM FIRST A CURIOSITY AND THEN A MEDICINE — DISCOVERY OF ITS REAL VALUE — THE STORY OF HOW IT CAME TO BE PRODUCED IN LARGE QUANTITIES — GREAT FLOW OF OIL — SWARM OF PROBLEMS TO SOLVE — STORAGE AND TRANSPORTATION — REFINING AND MARKETING — RAPID EXTENSION OF THE FIELD OF OPERATION — WORKERS IN GREAT NUMBERS WITH PLENTY OF CAPITAL — COSTLY BLUNDERS FREQUENTLY MADE — BUT EVERY DIFFICULTY BEING MET AND OVERCOME — THE NORMAL UNFOLDING OF A NEW AND WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY FOR INDIVIDUAL ENDEAVOUR
One of the busiest corners of the globe at the opening of the year 1872 was a strip of Northwestern Pennsylvania, not over fifty miles long, known the world over as the Oil Regions. Twelve years before this strip of land had been but little better than a wilderness; its chief inhabitants the lumbermen, who every season cut great swaths of primeval pine and hemlock from its hills, and in the spring floated them down the Allegheny River to Pittsburg. The great tides of Western emigration had shunned the spot for years as too rugged and unfriendly for settlement, and yet in twelve years this region avoided by men had been transformed into a bustling trade centre, where towns elbowed each other for place, into which three great trunk railroads had built branches, and every foot of whose soil was fought for by capitalists. It was the discovery and development of a new raw product, petroleum, which had made this change from wilderness to market-place. This product in twelve years had not only peopled a waste place of the earth, it had revolutionised the world's methods of illumination and added millions upon millions of dollars to the wealth of the United States.
Petroleum as a curiosity, and indeed in a small way as an article of commerce, was no new thing when its discovery in quantities called the attention of the world to this corner of Northwestern Pennsylvania. The journals of many an early explorer of the valleys of the Allegheny and its tributaries tell of springs and streams the surfaces of which were found covered with a thick oily substance which burned fiercely when ignited and which the Indians believed to have curative properties. As the country was opened, more and more was heard of these oil springs. Certain streams came to be named from the quantities of the substance found on the surface of the water, as "Oil Creek" in Northwestern Pennsylvania, "Old Greasy" or Kanawha in West Virginia. The belief in the substance as a cure-all increased as time went on and in various parts of the country it was regularly skimmed from the surface of the water as cream from a pan, or soaked up by woollen blankets, bottled, and peddled as a medicine for man and beast.
Up to the beginning of the 19th century no oil seems to have been obtained except from the surfaces of springs and streams. That it was to be found far below the surface of the earth was discovered independently at various points in Kentucky, West Virginia, Ohio and Pennsylvania by persons drilling for salt-water to be used in manufacturing salt. Not infrequently the water they found was mixed with a dark-green, evil-smelling substance which was recognised as identical with the well-known "rock-oil." It was necessary to rid the water of this before it could be used for salt, and in many places cisterns were devised in which the brine was allowed to stand until the oil had risen to the surface. It was then run into the streams or on the ground. This practice was soon discovered to be dangerous, so easily did the oil ignite. In several places, particularly in Kentucky, so much oil was obtained with the salt-water that the wells had to be abandoned. Certain of these deserted salt wells were opened years after, when it was found that the troublesome substance which had made them useless was far more valuable than the brine the original drillers sought.
Naturally the first use made of the oil obtained in quantities from the salt wells was medicinal. By the middle of the century it was without doubt the great American medicine. "Seneca Oil" seems to have been the earliest name under which petroleum appeared in the East. It was followed by a large output of Kentucky petroleum sold under the name "American Medicinal Oil." Several hundred thousand bottles of this oil are said to have been put up in Burkesville, Kentucky, and to have been shipped to the East and to Europe. The point at which the business of bottling petroleum for medicine was carried on most systematically and extensively was Pittsburg. Near that town, at Tarentum in Alleghany County, were located salt wells owned