OIL Then and Now
A group of Canadian Oil
retirees.
One of Petrolia's
Old Pump Jacks,one of many in an
oil field run
from a central drive building via the Jerker
Line system
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Bradshaw
collection
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Some of the men on the left, that went out into
the far reaches of the world armed with the technology
that was formed in the Oil Springs and Petrolia Ontario Oil Fields.After
the oil boom in this area was dried up, the oil Industry
was just starting up in other parts of the world. These
original Hard Oilers went out to acquire and build new
fortunes in Arabia, Persia and Mesopotamia, Australia,
Burma,Assam and Punjab India, Sarawak British Borneo,
Italy, Egypt, Sumatra,Borneo,Taracken,New
Caledonia,Sagelin Island {Siberia}, Madagascar,South
Africa,West Africa,Algiers, Crete, Jerusalem, Spain,
England, Ireland, Galatia, Romania, Russia, Germany,
Poland, Bavaria, Alsace-Loraine, New Zealand, British
New Guinea,Celebes Island, Ceram Island, Java, Sumatra,
Venezuela, Columbia, Equador, Argentina,Peru, Brazil,
West Indies, Tarakan, Barbados, Newfoundland, and
all other oil rich parts of the world. This early shot
on the right shows a group of hard working Petrolia lads
plying their trade in Australia
* Editors
Note...........In view of the conflict in Iraq, the
question has been posed" Is Petrolia responsible for
the conflict In Iraq?"It was drillers from Petrolia
that discovered and developed the oil fields of
Iraq. If the oil was not there would the USA be
involved in the region?Some would say if it was not
Hard Oilers that discovered the oil later on others
would have. I am sure that the oil fields of the
Petrolia region stand ready to fill in for any
inadequacies in the world oil supplies.
An early
shot of two oilmen with a spool wagon getting ready to" pull
rods". Each rod was about 15 or 20 feet long. Each was attached
vertically all the way down to
the bit. The rods were pulled by the horse pictured and each one
disconnected and layed out on
stands until the last rod with the bit was pulled out and the bit
was inspected and replaced
or
ok-ed. The whole system was replaced and oil
extraction was continued from hundreds of feet
down. On the right is a plaque at Victoria
Park Oil Shrine.
editors collection
Just
bought this picture from a UK Auction House.
One of the many locations that drillers from
Petrolia went was Baku on the Caspion Sea.
This shows an active and developing Oil
Field in Baku ca. 1886.Also as a added bonus
I have included the two back pages of this
picture. Thanx to David Hext for stitching
this scan together as this picture is
newspaper size
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Interesting
map showing the Oil Field details at the
Marthaville road and Caroline street area.
Probably ca.1860s to ca.1870s. Jerker lines
and well details and buildings.This area is
about one Kilometer west of Petrolia.
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editor's collection
J ames Love,John
Adams,William Stokes,Heilena
Kerr,William Allenby,George
Browning,K.C. Kerr,John Kerr
An oil
baron with his children and workers proudly
posing in front of one of his wells. This pic
displays the Spring Pole method |
editor's collection
A
group of eager Petrolia pioneers with high hopes
of striking it rich by extracting black gold
from the hard clay of Petrolia |
This is a
photo that was garnered during one of the
scanning days during Heritage week at
Victortia Hall.The photo to the right is the
reverse and reads, John Climies Drilling Rig,
Picture taken in Petrolia Ontario by A.F.
Yerkes Photographer in the year 1883.If I have
made a mistake interpretting the hand writing
please let me know.
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Just picked
these Stereoview slides (June 10 2023) Note
the Cities mentioned. Petrolia did get around
then. These 2 slides are probably ca.1880s and
part of a series of Petrolia slides.
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editor's collection
In this interesting pic
we see two foreign Oil Drillers in a rickshaw
and I don't know if this puller is completely ok
with these two large men.This scene is
ca.1900 in Singapore. |
Bradshaw collection
This is a pic showing a
group of oil men with a drilling rig shack
which was pulled by horse team to the spot
and moved into position by rolling on the
logs that are shown . The men could work out
of the weather and cold and when the
drilling was complete the rig was moved to
the next spot where drilling was to start. A
working pump jack was left continuing to
extract the black gold from deep down in the
earth.
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Bradshaw
collection
A
team of horses pulls the rig shack to the next
spot on skids. |
editor's collection
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Bradshaw
collection
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Bradshaw
collection
This
is the bottom line. This man is pumping the
black gold into a horse drawn tanker destined
for refining. |
editor's collection
I picked this card up
recently and it shows a steam driven drilling
rig probably ca.1910s. In with a group of
Petrolia pics but not positively identified as
Petrolia scene. Hopefully I can verify it as
Petrolia soon.
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ca.1903
Quad Drilling rig. Caption says Craise
Brothers Drilling Rig Petrolia Ont. Gordon
Photo |
editor's collection
left to
right....Muxlow, George Whitaker, Mr
Whitaker, 2 unknown boys, Tom Braybrook,
Pete. Churchhill, Tom Deacon.
Once the drilling was started Nitroglycerin was
dropped in cylinders {torpedoes} down the hole
to help entice the oil from the ground by
creating a pooling area from where the oil could
be pumped;. however, the nitro was very
dangerous and many scenes like this occurred
while handling this explosive chemical. |
editor's collection
This
is a drive building that in the early days would
have housed a steam engine and later an electric
motor. The drive system for moving the jerker
lines back and forth was driven from here and a
real and operating example can be seen at
Petrolia Discovery the Oil Museum of
Petrolia. |
An
interesting ca.1913 article about the area
Oil history.It looks like a corespondent
came here from Detroit for the Detroit News.
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The other
side of the newspaper page from the left
image. Even though a Detroit article it is
still quite interesting and is included
for your amusement.
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editor's collection
The caption for this pic
speaks for itself. Kerr had a well called "Old
Reliable" but I am not sure if he was drilling
that early.
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Great oil
well item from ca.1967
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An interesting
oil derrick starter rig. Not an unusual view but
earlier than most. This card is post marked
ca.1903. Note that it was sent by Fred N.Gorman
who obviously was an early post card collector.
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Interesting Cigarette ad
Featuring Oil Well Fire expert Pat
Patton. This ad is from about ca-1937.
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An interesting Letter Head
for Corey & Platt. Obviously sellers of
nitro glycerin for the oil
industry. (ca.1880s,) The front side shown
here has a list of some well know names in
Petrolia and Oil Springs history. As well
the right pic shows the reverse of this
document with more area names from the
period. Was the secretary making a
list of current clients?
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Sutherland
This is a very interesting 'panoramic' view of
the ca. 1929 workers of Petrolia's Canadian
Oil Refinery. The
names are to the right.Some day soon I will
type these out here so they are picked up by a
search but for now they are right.Thanks
to Norm Sutherland for bringing this pic to me.
I had Clouse Photo, scan & stitch this huge
photo.
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editor's collection
The
Canadian Oil Refinery early 1900s
This is a note
that the Editor received recently:
Thought it was time to update you on where we
have got to in locating Imperial and the other
old refineries in Petrolia. Not that we didn't
believe you but, once we got into it, we found
that history was rather full of conflicting
evidence!
Briefly we read the old Petrolia histories (and
the latest one), looked up some of the original
references, visited the library and Lambton
Room, dug up some of the Imperial archives and
most recently Charlie (with Imperial in Toronto)
visited the Ontario archives and located the
assessment rolls for the 1890's.
So we've now convinced ourselves that the
Imperial refinery was originally located on both
sides of Center Street, south of the Blind Line.
Originally it consisted of Englehart's Silver
Star refinery built in 1879 just prior to
Imperial Oil being formed in 1880 and, in 1881,
they also took over the adjacent Home Oil
refinery. Imperial moved its head office to
Center Street from London in December 1884. It
was not much more than a wooden shack (there's a
picture in one of the earlier Phelps histories)
and was probably located on the East side of
Center about 2/3 rd of the way up between
Petrolia St and the Blind Line. Between then and
1899, when Imperial moved to Sarnia, they took
over most of the other refineries and, by the
time they left town, they owned most of the
property on both sides of Center Street up to
the Blind Line (in those days Center St.
continued on north up to the 12th line). The
1899 assessment roll still has Imperial owning
all these properties as well as some on Tank and
Petrolia Streets.
After they left town (taking their equipment
with them) there were no operating refineries
left in Petrolia until, in 1901, the Canadian
Oil refinery was built North of the Blind Line
between Center and Tank where Canflow is now
located. The admin building picture and most of
the other refinery pictures are, in fact,
Canadian Oil which didn't leave town until 1952
when they moved to what is now Shell in Corunna.
They're the ones that left behind a number of
their old buildings.
One exception to the pictures of refineries
being Canadian Oil is Oil27.jpg on your website
(captioned The Canadian Oil Refinery early
1900s). Your caption probably reflects one of
the earlier Phelps Petrolia histories that had
it wrong. The latest book has a more likely date
(ca 1898 see page 57). In fact this is the
Imperial Oil refinery on Centre St. We can tell
because of the cheese-box still (used for
cutting paraffin distillates for wax/candle
manufacture) in the foreground and the jumbo
agitator in the background. These were both
unique features of the Imperial refinery and
here are pictures of them in the Imperial
archives (there are copies at Discovery). There
is also an old 1890's picture of Centre Street
looking North from the top of the old water
tower and you can see the jumbo agitator in the
distance on the East Side of Center.
One interesting note was that I ran across a map
of the North end of Petrolia (including the
location of Imperial) drawn from memory by a
Charles Waylett (it's in the Lambton Room
archives). It's very detailed and appeared to
reflect the area around 1890 . I was able to
locate Charles' grandson Doug in Calgary
(another retired oilman) and got more
background. Charles worked as an office
boy/janitor at Imperial and moved to Winnipeg
along with his future wife (Mary Aikin from Oil
City) in 1898 (I guess he was out of a job at
Imperial). He returned briefly to Petrolia in
1904 where he worked as a blacksmith and where
Chester Charles (Doug's father) was born. Then
to Fernie BC and finally Winnipeg where he died
in 1960. Charles' father and mother (Samuel and
Sarah) came to Petrolia from England in 1870,
moved to Winnipeg in 1910 and both died there
although they are buried in Hillsdale cemetery.
One last request (if you've got this far!). You
have a page for Corson Oil. I assume Corson was
closely related to Corey Oil. The Corey building
is now at Petrolia Discovery having been moved
from Tank Street in 1994. Do you know where on
Tank Street it was? I'm guessing it was opposite
the planned Community Center site. Reason we
were interested is that Imperial still owns some
land there (they know it as 351 Tank Street) and
Imperial finished up owning the Corey building
as a result of the merger with Texaco Canada.
And would that Corson Oil head office building
picture corsonoilb.jpg be the Corey building
when it was still on Tank Street?
Tony White
editor's
note
the above
note is an example of what top notch
research reaps. If you are doing a
school project or your thesis
etc.,this is what you have to
do.....................
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editor's collection
This was the unfortunate
scene that occurred when this vehicle was
accidentally backed into this oil tank in
ca.1915 at the Canadian Oil Refinery. The
two women and two men were extracted from
the tank and did not do too well. Here
the car is being hauled out
An interesting view
of a refinery in action ca.1870s
From the Topic negatives
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All of these pics and more are from my
own collection and from our contributors. If you
would like to become a contributor, I just need a
few minutes to scan what you have.
Email Martin martyd@ebtech.net
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