Amoco

Amoco Corporation
Amoco; Standard; and American
Formerly
  • Standard Oil Company of Indiana (1911–1985)[1]
  • Amoco Corporation (1985–1998)
Company typePublic
NYSE: AN (1985-1998)
IndustryFuel
PredecessorStandard Oil
Founded1889, as part of the Standard Oil Trust
FounderJohn D. Rockefeller
DefunctDecember 31, 1998 (1998-12-31)
FateMerged with BP, becoming a brand, but resurfaced in 2017 selling BP fuel.
SuccessorBP Amoco
HeadquartersAmoco Building,
WebsiteArchived official website at the Wayback Machine (archived February 12, 1998)

Amoco (/ˈæmək/ AM-ə-koh) is a brand of fuel stations operating in the United States and owned by British conglomerate BP since 1998. The Amoco Corporation was an American chemical and oil company, founded by Standard Oil Company in 1889 around a refinery in Whiting, Indiana, and was officially the Standard Oil Company of Indiana until 1985. In 1911, it became an independent corporation as part of the break-up of the Standard Oil trust. Incorporated in Indiana, it was headquartered in Chicago.

In 1925, Standard Oil of Indiana absorbed the American Oil Company,[1] founded in Baltimore in 1910, and incorporated in 1922, by Louis Blaustein and his son Jacob. The combined corporation operated or licensed gas stations under both the Standard name and the American or Amoco name (the latter from American oil company) and its logo using these names became a red, white and blue oval with a torch in the center. By the mid-twentieth century it was ranked the largest oil company in the United States. In 1985, it changed its corporate name to Amoco.[2]

The firm's innovations included two essential parts of the modern industry, the gasoline tanker truck and the drive-through filling station.[3] Its "Amoco Super-Premium" lead-free gasoline was marketed decades before environmental concerns led to the eventual phase out of leaded gasoline throughout the United States. Amoco's headquarters were located in the Amoco Building (also called the Standard Oil Building, and nicknamed "Big Stan", now the Aon Center) in Chicago, Illinois.[4]

Amoco merged with British Petroleum in December 1998 to form BP Amoco, which was renamed BP in 2001.[5] The Amoco name was branded at the gas pump for the highest 93 octane blends. The Deepwater Horizon oil spill of 2010 tarnished the BP brand in the US resulting in a rethinking of US branding. In October 2017, BP announced reintroduction of the Amoco branded stations to select US markets.[6] As of 2023, there were over 600 new Amoco stations in the eastern and midwestern United States.[7]

History

[edit]

Standard Oil of Indiana

[edit]

Standard Oil of Indiana was formed in 1889 by John D. Rockefeller as part of the Standard Oil Trust. The company's operations centered around the Whiting Refinery situated on Lake Michigan, and first operational in 1890.[8][9] In 1910, with the increased usage of the automobile, Indiana Standard decided to specialize in providing gasoline to consumers. In 1911, the year it became independent from the Standard Oil trust, the company sold 88% of the gasoline and kerosene sold in the Midwest. In 1912, it opened its first gas service station in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[5]

When the Standard Oil Trust was broken up in 1911,[10] Indiana Standard was assigned marketing territory covering most of the Midwestern United States, including Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, Kansas, and Missouri. It had the exclusive rights to use the Standard name in the region. Soon after, Indiana Standard scientist William Burton pioneered a new way to process crued oil, called thermal cracking, which allowed the industry to produce more oil.[10] The company licensed the process to 14 companies between 1914-1919, including former parent company Standard Oil of New Jersey.[10] The company opened its Casper refinery in 1914.[11]

In 1918, Indiana Standard named Colonel Robert W. Stewart as its first chairman.[12] Under Stewart, it began investing in other oil companies outside its Standard marketing territory, beginning with the purchase of the Dixie Oil Company of Louisiana in 1919 and a one-third interest in Midwest Refining in 1920.[13] By June 1921, Standard Oil owned 85% of Midwest’s stock.[11]

By 1922, the company also had facilities in Sugar Creek, Missouri; Wood River, Illinois; and Greybull, and Laramie in Wyoming.[14] The Casper facility was the largest volume gasoline refinery in the world by this time, turning 1.35 million barrels of crude oil per month into 615,000 barrels of gasoline.[11] In the 1920s and 1930s, Indiana Standard opened up dozens more refining and oil-drilling facilities. Combined with a new oil-refining process, Indiana Standard created its exploration and production business, Stanolind, in 1931.[15] In the following years, a period of intense exploration and search for oil-rich fields ensued; the company drilled over 1,000 wells in 1937 alone.

Purchase of American Oil Company

[edit]

After working for Standard Oil, Blaustein eventually saved enough capital[16] to found his own oil company with his son in 1910. They called it the American Oil Company (AMOCO).[17] Blaustein incorporated his business in 1922.[18]

In 1923, the Blausteins sold a half interest in American Oil to the Pan American Petroleum and Transport Company in exchange for a guaranteed supply of oil. Before this deal, Amoco was forced to depend on Standard Oil of New Jersey, a competitor, for its supplies. Standard Oil of Indiana acquired Pan American in 1925, beginning John D. Rockefeller's association with the Amoco name.[18]

In the wake of the infamous Teapot Dome Scandal, it was discovered that Harry Sinclair, Robert Stewart, and others, had been laundering money through a shell company called Continental Trading Company and using the funds to buy Liberty Bonds during World War I. Though Stewart was never charged with a crime, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. demanded his resignation. After a lengthy proxy fight between the two, Stewart was eventually ousted in March 1929.[12]

Pipelines and oil transport

[edit]

In 1921, Indiana Standard bought a half interest in the Sinclair Pipeline Company, a subsidiary of Sinclair Oil Corporation,[19] which owned a network of crude oil pipelines in the midwestern United States. The stake in the Pan American Petroleum and Transport Company gave the company interest in the American Oil Company, which marketed half of PAT's oil in the United States. Indiana Standard raised its stake in PAT to 81 percent by 1929. The two companies officially merged in 1954.[20]

In 1930, Stanolind completed its acquisition of Sinclair Pipeline[21] and also acquired half of Sinclair Crude Oil Purchasing Company.[19] All of the pipeline companies were consolidated into the newly formed Stanolind Pipeline Company.[21] The crude oil purchasing operations became Stanolind Crude Oil Purchasing Company.[22] The pipeline company headquarters were located in the Philcade building in Tulsa, Oklahoma. In 1950, all of the corporation's pipeline activities were merged into a single entity, which was named Service Pipeline Company.[21] By 1964, the company operated 14,500 miles of pipelines located in the central part of the country. It gathered crude oil from 34,300 wells and carried it to 59 refineries, delivering 900,000 to 950,000 barrels a day.[21]

Lead-free gasoline

[edit]
Amoco gas station in Pennsylvania, 1935

While most oil companies were switching to leaded gasolines en masse during the mid-to-late 1920s, American Oil chose to continue marketing its premium-grade "Amoco-Gas" (later Amoco Super-Premium)[23] as a lead-free gasoline by using aromatics rather than tetraethyllead to increase octane levels. This was decades before the environmental movement of the early 1970s that led to more stringent auto-emission controls, which ultimately mandated the universal phase out of leaded gasoline.[24]

The "Amoco" lead-free gasoline was sold at American's stations in the eastern and southern U.S. alongside American Regular gasoline, which was a leaded fuel. By 1970, lead-free Amoco was introduced in the Indiana Standard marketing area in 1970.[23][25] The Red Crown Regular and White Crown Premium (later Gold Crown Super Premium) gasolines marketed by parent company Standard Oil (Indiana) in its prime marketing area in the Midwest before 1961, also contained lead.[26] By 1978, Amoco had phased out premium lead gas.[23]

In November 1986, amid pressures from the EPA to cut down on the usage of lead in gasoline, Amoco became the first major oil company to say it would quit all retail sales of leaded gasoline. In its place, Amoco began selling a mid-grade 89 octane unleaded gasoline (the same number as its leaded regular gasoline), along with its unleaded regular and unleaded premium offerings.[27]

World War II

[edit]

World War II followed this period of exploration; Indiana Standard participated in the war effort, discovering new means of refinement and even a way of producing TNT more quickly and easily. In addition, Indiana Standard significantly contributed to the aviation and land gasoline needed for the Allied armies. Also, during the war Indiana Standard created its chemical division, formed from the merger of the Pan American Chemicals Company and the Indoil Chemical Company.

Post-war

[edit]

In the late 1940s, after World War II, Indiana Standard returned to focusing on domestic oil refinement and advancement. In 1947, Indiana Standard was the first company to drill off-shore, in the Gulf of Mexico, and in 1948, Stanolind Oil invented Hydrafrac, a hydraulic well fracturing process that increased oil production worldwide. Initially the Hydrafrac process was licensed exclusively to Halliburton.

Amoco station in Richmond, 1954

By the early 1950s, Standard Oil of Indiana was ranked as the second-largest American oil company with annual gross sales of $1.5 billion.[28] It had 12 refineries in the United States, marketed its products in 41 states, owned 12,000 miles (19,000 km) of crude oil pipelines, 10,000 miles (16,000 km) of trunk lines, and 1,700 miles (2,700 km) of product pipelines.[29]

In October 1954, Standard Indiana opened its Mandan refinery in North Dakota under its American Oil Company subsidiary.[30]

Business expansion

[edit]

In the late 1950s and early 1960s, Indiana Standard began to diversify it's assets. It again led the way with scientific and technological discoveries.[citation needed] Indiana Standard discovered PTA, a chemical for polyester fiber production.[31] In 1968, following that discovery, Indiana Standard acquired the Avisun Corporation and Patchogue-Plymouth, forming the Amoco Fabrics and Fibers Company.[citation needed] By 1992, the company was trying to sell off its yarn factories in Alabama and Georgia.[32]

The company's Amoco Foam Products subsidiary made polystyrene cups, plates, carrying trays and other products. The division was sold to Tenneco in June 1996.[33]

Amoco

[edit]

In 1956, the Pan-Am stations in the southeastern U.S. were rebranded as Amoco stations. In 1961, Indiana Standard reorganized its marketing giving its American Oil Company unit responsibility for its retail operations nationwide under the Standard name inside the Indiana Standard marketing area (Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming) and under the American name outside that region. Both brands shared the same redesigned torch and oval logo for easy identification nationwide. The Utoco name used in Indiana Standard's southwestern region was replaced by the American name. The Amoco name continued to be used outside the U.S. and as a brand on certain American Oil products.

Soon after, the company began to expand. With an exploration office in Canada, Indiana Standard was now an international gas company. Indiana Standard created several new plants and claimed various new oil fields in this time period, as the company prospered in the post-war boom.

By 1971, all the divisions of Indiana Standard bore the Amoco name including American Oil which was renamed Amoco Oil with American stations renamed Amoco stations. By 1975, Amoco began phasing in the Amoco name in the old Indiana Standard sales territory. Standard Oil Company (Indiana) was officially renamed Amoco Corporation in 1985.[34] Facilities, like the one in Casper, were renamed using the new branding.[11]

Phillips Petroleum's assets in the General American Oil Company, acquired in 1983, were later taken over by Amoco.

Carlin's Amoco Station was built at Roanoke, Virginia, around 1947; it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2012.[35][36]

Global expansion

[edit]
American station on Hylan Boulevard, NY City, 1973

Standard of Indiana established operations in Venezuela during the 1920s under dictator Juan Vicente Gomez. However, by 1932, during the worst of the Great Depression, the company sold its interests to Standard Oil of New Jersey.[10]

In 1958, Indiana again went overseas by signing a deal with Iran to develop oil interests in the Middle Eastern country.[10]

In the following decades, Amoco expanded globally, creating plants, oil wells, or markets in over 30 countries, including Italy, Australia (acquired by BP in 1984), Britain, Belgium, Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, South Korea, Taiwan, Norway, Venezuela, Russia, China, Trinidad and Tobago, and Egypt.[citation needed] In addition, the company also acquired a division of Tenneco Oil Company and Dome Petroleum Limited,[citation needed] becoming one of the world's largest oil companies.

In April 1981, reorganized Amoco Production, Amoco Oil, Amoco Chemicals, and Amoco Minerals—its four main units into worldwide operating concerns—into worldwide operating concerns. The Amoco International Oil Company was also merged into Amoco Production, with its refining and marketing operations transferred to Amoco Oil and its marine transportation operations made part of Indiana Standard's supply and technology department.[37]

In July 1988, Amoco acquired Dome Petroleum, a Canadian company.[38] By 1989, Amoco was the fifth-largest gasoline seller in the United States with more than 14,000 stations in 30 states.[39]

Merger with BP

[edit]

By the end of the 1990s, worldwide oil prices had slumped to their lowest point in over a decade. Amoco, the fourth largest US oil producer at the time, reported a 50% fall in earnings in second quarter of 1998. Analysts believed Amoco was hurt by its lack of international refining. On August 11, 1998, Amoco announced it would merge with British Petroleum (BP) in the world's largest industrial merger.[40]

Though billed as a merger of equals, BP held control of the new entity. Shareholder control was split 60/40 in favor of BP shareholders. The new company was also based on London, where BP was based, with BP chief executive Sir John Browne running the company. BP chairman Peter Sutherland and Amoco chairman Larry Fuller served as co-chairs. The consolidated company would also cut 6,000 jobs worldwide.[40]

The new company made efforts to further consolidate by announcing the acquisition of Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO) for $26.8 billion in April 1999.[41] However, it wasn't until BP Amoco agreed to divest ARCO's Alaska holdings that the FTC approved the deal a year later. The company then cut 2,000 jobs.[42]

In August 1999, BP Amoco sold its western Canadian oil properties for $1.1 billion.[43] In September 2001, BP Amoco sold its refineries in Salt Lake City and Mandan, North Dakota to Tesoro Petroleum.[44]

Originally, the plan was for all US BP service stations to be converted to Amoco while all overseas Amoco service stations were to be converted to BP.[clarification needed] But by 2004, BP announced that all Amoco service stations would either be closed or renamed to BP service stations, including the remaining stations still bearing the "Standard" name.[citation needed] BP also chose to rename its gasolines with the Amoco name, changing its midgrade and premium offerings to the Silver and Ultimate brandings that Amoco used. By 2008, the "Amoco Fuels" name had been mostly discontinued in favor of "BP Gasoline with Invigorate." The Amoco name, however, lives on as BP continues to sell Silver and Ultimate under the BP name.

In addition, a few BP stations continued operation under the Amoco name. Most were either converted to BP, demolished and replaced with BP-style stations, abandoned, or switched to competitor brands. On April 1, 2010, in Mississippi, Chevron purchased some BP gas stations, which had been Amoco, to convert them to the Texaco brand.[45]

In the aftermath of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, there were reports in the press that BP was reconsidering rebranding itself as Amoco in the US.[46] Some independently owned BP stations, including former Amoco stations, switched to a different brand due to the public relations fallout as a result of the oil spill.[47]

Leadership

[edit]

President

[edit]

William P. Cowan, 1911–1918
Lauren J. Drake, 1918
William M. Burton, 1919–1927
Edward G. Seubert, 1927–1945
Alonzo W. Peake, 1945–1955
Frank O. Prior, 1955–1958
John E. Swearingen, 1958–1965
Dr Robert C. Gunness, 1965–1974
George V. Myers, 1974–1978
Richard M. Morrow, 1978–1983
H. Laurence Fuller, 1983–1995
William G. Lowrie, 1996–1998

Chairman of the Board

[edit]

Colonel Robert W. Stewart, 1918–1929[12]
Robert E. Wilson, 1945–1958
Frank O. Prior, 1958–1960
John E. Swearingen, 1965–1983
Richard M. Morrow, 1983–1991
H. Laurence Fuller, 1991–1998

Corporate image

[edit]

Logos

[edit]
The first "torch & oval" logo used 1947–1960, here on a highway map

The first Indiana Standard logo was unveiled in 1926, after a competition. The logo featured a circle, representing strength, stability, and dependability, with the words "Standard Oil Company (Indiana)" in red. The inner circle represents the cycle of service to customers. The word Service was written in the inside of the circles. In addition, the logo also had a torch with a flame, symbolizing progress. This logo appeared on gas station buildings. The roadside sign was a blue rectangle saying "STANDARD SERVICE" in white block letters.

Concurrently, American Oil introduced in 1932, a logo which was the first to bear the name "Amoco". It featured an ellipse divided into three sections horizontally; the top and bottom were red, and the middle had a black background with white lettering. This logo was used in the northeastern U.S.

A new logo was developed by Indiana Standard and introduced in 1946. It combined the Standard torch with the Amoco oval. The oval colors were, from top to bottom, red, white, and blue. The new logo was called the "Torch and Oval (T&O)". In parts of the country where the company could not use the name "Standard", the logo read "Utoco" or "Pan-Am". When the "Pan-Am" name was replaced by "Amoco", it marked the first time the torch and oval was used with the Amoco name. The red and black logo continued to be used in the northeast and maps distributed by Amoco in the late 1950s through 1960 showed both logos.[48]

1961–1970 Standard logo. Logo bore the "AMERICAN" name outside the Indiana Standard marketing area

In 1961, the torch and oval was redesigned with a flatter oval and a more contemporary torch design with the logo bearing the Standard or American name in the U.S. and the Amoco name outside the U.S.

The next updated logo, in 1971, enhanced the previous one. It featured a blue bottom and a sleeker-looking torch. In addition, the word "Standard" became italicized and thicker. This was used by Midwestern station owners who had the option of using the Amoco name (more familiar in the East and South) or using the more familiar Standard name. Owners used it until they were converted to BP or another franchise. In the 1970s, both the Standard and Amoco brand icons were used on products (such as Amoco Roadmaps, Amoco Motorclub, and the Amaco Credit Card).

The final logo of the original Amoco, used until 2002

The final Amoco logo of the company simply changed the name on the logo to "Amoco". The logo featured the familiar torch and divided ellipse.[49] A horizontal logo was also used, with the italicized word "Amoco" featuring trailing red, white, and blue horizontal stripes, taken from the divided ellipse of the Amoco logo. This logo was used primarily on pumps and service station canopies.

After the rebrand, for a time the Amoco brand was retained as a sub-brand to the main BP helios logo, mainly in the form of the horizontal logo (used on signage as a smaller element beneath the price displays); the black background was replaced with green, to symbolize the new parent company.[50]

Although a few Amoco stations still use their former logo, most have since been converted to the BP livery. In St. Louis, Missouri, the largest Amoco sign in the world, both before and after the company's demise, still stands. It stands at the intersection of Clayton Road, Skinker Boulevard, McCausland Avenue, and Interstate 64 (near the southwest corner of Forest Park, home of the St. Louis Zoo, the Saint Louis Art Museum and other prominent attractions). It is visible up to two miles away on the interstate. Most surviving Amoco stations are kept so BP can continue holding the trademarks for Amoco and Standard.

In May 2008, United States BP stations mostly discontinued use of the "Amoco Fuels" logo as BP introduced its new brand of fuel, "BP Gasoline with Invigorate". BP still uses the Silver and Amoco Ultimate brands for its midgrade and premium gasolines. For the 2017 revival (see below), the Amoco logo got a new, modernized refresh to its "torch and oval" image.

Sponsorship

[edit]

In 1968–72, (as American Oil Company) the company sponsored the American Freeway Patrol (AFP) in the metropolitan San Diego area as part of an expansion of service stations into Southern California. The American Freeway Patrol cruised the freeways and assisted disabled motorists free of charge, and provided helicopter traffic reports for local radio stations which was groundbreaking at the time. Don Langford, with KFWB (AM) Los Angeles, joined the American Freeway Patrol, San Diego, as traffic reporter on KOGO-AM-FM, KSON (AM), KITT (FM) San Diego, and KMLO (AM) Vista.[51][52]

In 1976, Amoco (under the "Standard" name) sponsored the Barney Oldfield Speedway attraction at Marriott's Great America theme park in Gurnee, Illinois. Although the sponsorship deal ended when Marriott sold the park to Six Flags in 1985, the Standard logo can still be seen on all of the Barney Oldfield Speedway (now Great America Raceway) cars.

In 1988, legendary racer Mario Andretti drove the Amoco Ultimate Lola/Chevrolet for Newman/Haas Racing in the Indianapolis 500 and throughout the season in the CART IndyCar World Series. Andretti provided great publicity for Amoco by winning races at Phoenix and Cleveland that year, part of his 52 career IndyCar wins. Andretti also appeared in Amoco television commercials that aired in local race markets as part of the IndyCar sponsorship campaign.

Dave Blaney drove a #93 Pontiac Grand Prix/Dodge Intrepid under Amoco sponsorship in the NASCAR Cup Series and NASCAR Xfinity Series from 1997 until the brand's demise in 2001.

Incidents

[edit]

On August 27, 1955, the Whiting refinery suffered a devastating fire when a processing tower exploded. The fire lasted eight days, consumed 45 acres of storage tanks, and damaged nearby homes and businesses. In all, two people were killed, another 40 were injured 40, and 1,500 were evacuated. By the following year, the facility was repaired and the company had purchased much of the surrounding area in order to expand.[53][54]

In November 1978 - abnormally high temperatures were detected in fuel tanks in the basement of an Amoco gas station in Centralia, Pennsylvania, owned by then-mayor John Coddington. The source was determined to be the town's ongoing mine fire. To prevent risk of the fuel igniting, the gasoline in the tanks was drained. The gas station was shuttered in December 1979, and demolished on November 9, 1981.[55]

On March 16, 1978, the very large crude carrier Amoco Cadiz ran ashore just north of Landunvez, Finistère, Brittany, France, causing one of the largest oil spills in history. Amoco was ordered by a federal judge Charles Norgle in a 1990 ruling to pay $120 million in damages and restitution to France.[56]

On October 21, 1980, an explosion at an Amoco plant in New Castle, Delaware, killed six people, caused $46 million in property damage, and eventually led to the loss of 300 jobs.[57]

In the 1980s and 1990s, six former Amoco chemical engineers at the firm's Naperville, Illinois, research campus developed a deadly form of brain cancer. Researchers who conducted a three-year study of the cancer cluster determined that the cancer cases were workplace-related, but they could not identify the source of the workers' ailments. In June 2010, BP demolished Building 503, where the employees had worked. According to a company spokesperson, the building was "underused", and "required upgrades the company deemed too expensive." Heirs of one of the cancer-stricken workers won a $2.75 million suit against BP Amoco in 2000.[58]

Brand relaunch

[edit]
Amoco (brand)
Amoco gas station in St. Louis, 2023
Product typeService stations
OwnerBP
CountryUnited States
Introduced1998; 26 years ago (1998)
MarketsEastern United States

It was announced on October 10, 2017, that BP would bring the Amoco name back, after an absence of almost a decade.[59] BP had said the first station would relaunch in 2017. Its intention for relaunching the name was to capture more of the U.S. fuel industry.[60]

As such, aside from the aforementioned St. Louis station with the large Amoco sign as well as a few other isolated instances, most newer Amoco stations were converted from competitor brands as opposed to BP.[citation needed][opinion]

As three of BP's Big Oil competitors already sold gasoline under multiple brands that were once competitors (ExxonMobil with Exxon & Mobil,[61] Chevron with its namesake brand & Texaco,[62] and Phillips 66 with its namesake brand, Conoco, & 76[63]), this left Shell Oil Company as the only Big Oil company to sell gasoline under one brand.[original research?]

Several Gulf stations were rechristened as Amoco stations on Long Island, New York, starting in November 2017.[64][failed verification]

The Amoco brand returned to the Pittsburgh market in fall 2020, when locally-based Coen Markets announced a marketing deal with BP to sell Amoco-branded gasoline at all of its fuel-offering locations. As most of Coen's stores were already selling BP gasoline (with a small handful having been Amoco stations before BP), this marked the largest switchover from BP to Amoco since the brand's reintroduction, though a few Coen stations were also selling Exxon, Sunoco, and Citgo prior to the deal.[65] While the deal didn't affect BP as a whole, as BP lost several stations in the market to Marathon Petroleum years before, it essentially relegated the BP brand to 7-Eleven stations in the market as well as a few independent operators.

Following the acquisition of TravelCenters of America in May 2023, BP began converting all pumps to either BP or Amoco branding. February 2024, there were 675 Amoco gas stations in the United States.[66]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b History of the Standard Oil Co. on Garage Art
  2. ^ Rosenheim, Daniel (April 24, 1985). "Goodbye, Standard; Hello, Amoco Corp". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
  3. ^ Leffall, J (1998). "Huge Amoco began small in Baltimore; Roots: The metered gas pump, no-knock gasoline and other innovations followed Louis Blaustein's founding of American Oil Co. in 1910". The Baltimore Sun. p. 1.C. Retrieved 2013-11-21.
  4. ^ "Contacts." Amoco. February 12, 1998. Retrieved on March 31, 2010.
  5. ^ a b Oller, Samantha (October 11, 2017). "What's Behind Amoco's Return?". CSP Daily News. Retrieved 2024-10-23.
  6. ^ Rocco, Matthew (10 October 2017). "Amoco gas stations are coming back". Fox Business. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
  7. ^ "Amoco | Products and services | Home".
  8. ^ Borgo, Anthony (2017-03-29). "Standard Oil". Whiting Public Library. Retrieved 2024-10-23.
  9. ^ Schnurr, Ryan (2017-08-29). "A 'Toxic Tour' of the Whiting Refinery on the Shores of Lake Michigan - Belt Magazine". beltmag.com. Retrieved 2024-10-23.
  10. ^ a b c d e Yergin, Daniel (1991). The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money, and Power (PDF). New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. pp. 110–112, 237, 507–508. ISBN 9780671502485.
  11. ^ a b c d Mast, Tom (March 1, 2015). "Refining Wyoming's Oil for 120 years | WyoHistory.org". Wyoming Historical Society. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  12. ^ a b c Banik, Jerry (October 2010). ""Battle of the Century" In Whiting". Whiting-Robertsdale Historical Society. Retrieved 2024-10-25.
  13. ^ Olien, Diana Davids; Olien, Roger M. "Running Out of Oil: Discourse and Public Policy, 1909-1929" (PDF). The Business History Conference. The University of Texas-Permian Basin, Department of History. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
  14. ^ "Standard Oil Company (Indiana)". Stanolind Record. 3 (8): 2. June 1922 – via Indiana State Library.
  15. ^ Percefull, Gary (1989-04-23). "Amoco Changes, But Retains Ties to Oil Capital". Tulsa World. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  16. ^ "Louis Blaustein, Oil Magnate, Philanthropist, Dead at 68". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 2015-03-20. Retrieved 2024-10-23.
  17. ^ Marcus, Jacob Rader (1989). United States Jewry, 1776-1985. Wayne State University Press. p. 276. ISBN 978-0-8143-2186-7.
  18. ^ a b Hamilton, Martha (1999-02-01). "A Corporate History Rooted Deeply in Baltimore". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 2010-12-01. Retrieved 2010-06-02.
  19. ^ a b "During Depression Years Canny Sale, Purchases Double Sinclair in Size". Sinclair Oil. Archived from the original on November 28, 2010. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
  20. ^ "TWO OIL CONCERNS MOVE FOR MERGER". The New York Times. February 10, 1954. Retrieved October 24, 2024.
  21. ^ a b c d "PIPELINE's CHIEF RECEIVES AWARD". The New York Times. January 19, 1964. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
  22. ^ "NEW SLASHES MADE IN CRUDE OIL PRICES". The New York Times. November 2, 1930. Retrieved October 23, 2024.
  23. ^ a b c Oudijk, Gil (March 17, 2010). "The Rise and Fall of Organometallic Additives in Automotive Gasoline". Environmental Forensics. 17 (1): 17–49. Bibcode:2010EnvFo..11...17O. doi:10.1080/15275920903346794 – via Research Gate.
  24. ^ PrintMag (2010-07-28). "BP: Branding Petroleum". PRINT Magazine. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  25. ^ "Introducing Amoco Premium Lead-Free". The Milwaukee Sentinel. 1977-05-10. Retrieved 2010-06-02.
  26. ^ Henderson, Scott Benjamin Wayne. Gas Pump Collector's Guide. Voyageur Press. ISBN 978-1-61060-635-6.
  27. ^ Tribune, Chicago (1987-06-15). "LEADED FUEL RUNNING OUT OF GAS". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  28. ^ Doyle, Jack (August 21, 2015). ""Inferno at Whiting" Standard Oil: 1955 | The Pop History Dig". pophistorydig.com. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  29. ^ Ask.com "Amoco Corporation."
  30. ^ Carmical, J.h. (October 3, 1954). "Indiana Standard Dedicates First Major Facility of Its Kind in North Dakota". The New York Times. Retrieved October 25, 2024.
  31. ^ "STANDARD OIL of INDIANA - History in short". www.aukevisser.nl. Retrieved 2022-04-25.
  32. ^ "AMOCO WILL SELL SOME ASPHALT LINES TO CITGO". The New York Times. June 20, 1992. Retrieved October 25, 2024.
  33. ^ "$310 MILLION FOR AMOCO CONTAINER UNIT". The New York Times. June 27, 1996. Retrieved October 25, 2024.
  34. ^ "Amoco". Answers.com. Retrieved 2010-06-02.
  35. ^ "National Register of Historic Places Listings". Weekly List of Actions Taken on Properties. National Park Service. 2012-11-30.
  36. ^ Alison S. Blanton (June 2012). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Carlin's Amoco Station" (PDF). Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-02-01. Retrieved 2014-01-21. and Accompanying six photo Archived 2014-02-01 at the Wayback Machine
  37. ^ "Indiana Standard Reorganizing Units". The New York Times. March 10, 1981. Retrieved October 25, 2024.
  38. ^ "Amoco Purchase". The New York Times. July 15, 1988. Retrieved October 25, 2024.
  39. ^ Tribune, Chicago (1987-06-15). "LEADED FUEL RUNNING OUT OF GAS". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  40. ^ a b "BP and Amoco in oil mega-merger". BBC. August 11, 1998. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  41. ^ "BP Amoco Acquires Arco - CBS News". www.cbsnews.com. 1999-04-01. Retrieved 2024-10-25.
  42. ^ "FTC approves BP Amoco, Arco mega-merger - Apr. 13, 2000". money.cnn.com. April 13, 2000. Retrieved 2024-10-25.
  43. ^ Pritchard, Timothy (August 6, 1999). "CANADIANS BUY BP AMOCO ASSETS". The New York Times. Retrieved October 25, 2024.
  44. ^ "Tesoro finishes purchase of BP refineries at Mandan, Salt Lake City". Oil & Gas Journal. 2001-09-07. Retrieved 2024-10-25.
  45. ^ "US BP distributors consider reverting to Amoco brand". Reuters. 2010-08-01. Retrieved 2022-04-25.
  46. ^ Weber, Harry R. (July 31, 2010). "Time to scrap BP brand? Gas-station owners divided". Associated Press. Archived from the original on August 6, 2010.
  47. ^ Joshua Trujillo / Seattlepi.com via AP. "Some BP gas station owners switching brands because of Gulf oil spill". The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate. Retrieved 2012-11-30.
  48. ^ "North American road maps – A". Zippy.ci.uiuc.edu. Archived from the original on 2006-09-15. Retrieved 2012-11-30.
  49. ^ "The Torch and Oval". Amoco. 1997. Archived from the original on 1998-02-12. Retrieved 2012-11-30.
  50. ^ "LIFE Photos | Classic Pictures From LIFE Magazine's Archives". LIFE.com. Retrieved 2012-11-30.
  51. ^ Earnest Winston (2000-01-01). "Father of Calif. gov dies in Montgomery". www.enquirer.com.
  52. ^ City of San Diego (1971-09-21). "Proposed Charter Amendments and Arguments" (PDF). Retrieved 2018-03-04.
  53. ^ Doyle, Jack (August 21, 2015). ""Inferno at Whiting" Standard Oil: 1955 | The Pop History Dig". pophistorydig.com. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
  54. ^ "1955 Standard Oil refinery blast sounded like 'end of the world'". Chicago Tribune.
  55. ^ PA, Centralia (2014-11-01). "Coddington's Gas Station and the Centralia Mine Fire". Centralia PA. Retrieved 2024-08-24.
  56. ^ "Amoco Cadiz Damages Set". The New York Times. July 25, 1990. p. D4. Retrieved September 4, 2020.
  57. ^ Barrish, Robert A. (2001-07-23). "Taking the Hazard Out of Hazardous Chemicals". Division of Air and Waste Management - Air Quality Management. Archived from the original on 2005-09-07. Retrieved 2010-06-03.
  58. ^ Smith, G. BP building gone, but its medical mystery remains. Chicago Tribune, June 2, 2010.
  59. ^ "BP Brings Back Amoco Brand for US Fuel Network". BP United States (Press release). 2017-10-10. Archived from the original on 2017-10-11.
  60. ^ "BP brings back Amoco brand for U.S. fuel network".
  61. ^ "Our global brands". ExxonMobil. Retrieved 2023-02-24.
  62. ^ Affairs, Chevron. "Chevron Fuel Brands and Service Stations". chevron.com. Retrieved 2023-02-24.
  63. ^ "Fuels & Lubricants". Phillips 66. Retrieved 2023-02-24.
  64. ^ Holtz, Steve (October 10, 2017). "BP to Reintroduce Amoco Fuel Brand". CSP Daily News. Retrieved 12 October 2017.
  65. ^ Davidson, Tom (September 16, 2020). "CoGo's to become Coen Markets as part of rebranding". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
  66. ^ Gignac, Rachel (February 8, 2024). "bp Upgrading TravelCenters of America Sites With Amoco Brand". CSP Daily News. Retrieved 2024-10-24.
[edit]