The World's Largest Public Domain Media Search Engine
USS Pigeon (AM-47) on the Yangtze river with oiler alongside, in the 1920s (NH 96718)

Similar

USS Pigeon (AM-47) on the Yangtze river with oiler alongside, in the 1920s (NH 96718)

description

Summary

The U.S. Navy minesweeper USS Pigeon (AM-47) with the Standard Oil Co. tanker Mei Hung alongside, while serving as a gunboat with the Yangtze River Patrol in China during the 1920s.

In 1862, John D. Rockefeller, a resident of Cleveland Ohio, joined with two partners to establish an oil-refining company. The men purchased oil wells in Titusville, Pennsylvania, and constructed a well near Cleveland. In 1865, Rockefeller bought out one of the partners' interest in the company, creating Rockefeller & Andrews Oil Company. In this year alone, the business earned approximately 200,000 dollars. While Rockefeller reaped extensive wealth in 1865, the oil industry was just beginning to grow. Most people only used oil for lighting. The market was limited. Prices fluctuated dramatically, as oil production waxed and waned during this period. To try and stabilize oil prices Rockefeller and Samuel Andrews, his partner, approached O.H. Payne, owner of the largest oil refinery in Cleveland. They proposed that the three men unite their companies together. By having a single oil company operating in northeastern Ohio, this company could hopefully fix prices and avoid the tremendous swings as production sometimes increased or dwindled. The company organizers convinced numerous other Cleveland firms to join with them. In other cases, they bought out the companies or drove them out of business by selling their oil for a much cheaper price than their competitors could. In 1870, Rockefeller united these companies together as the Standard Oil Company.

date_range

Date

1920
create

Source

Naval History and Heritage Command
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain

Explore more

united states
united states