Skelly Oil
File:Skelleyoil.jpg | |
Former type | Public Corporation |
---|---|
Industry | Oil |
Fate | Merged to form Getty Oil |
Predecessor(s) | Skelly Sanky Oil Company |
Successor(s) | Getty Oil |
Founded | 1919 |
Defunct | 1977 |
Headquarters | Tulsa, Oklahoma |
Products | Motor oils, lubricants, natural gas, motor fuels |
Employees | 5,000 approx |
Subsidiaries | Hawkeye Chemical, Vacouver Plywood, Surfco Marketing |
Skelly Oil Company was a medium sized "major" oil company founded in 1919 by William Grove (Bill) Skelly, Chesley Coleman Herndon and Frederick A. Pielsticker in Tulsa, Oklahoma.[1] Previously, about 1915, Mr. Skelly had formed Skelly Sanky Oil Company in Duncan, Oklahoma. Mr. Skelly came to Oklahoma from Pennsylvania in about 1913 where he worked as a mule skinner and tool dresser in the oil fields around Ardmore and Duncan, Oklahoma, prior to partnering with Jack Sanky. Mr. Herndon was the son of Captain Thomas Herndon, a Civil War veteran who oversaw a family fortune in real estate, tobacco and banking in Tennessee ([source]"An Adventure Called Skelly," by Roberta Ironside, copyright 1970 by Skelly Oil Company). Captain Herndon's cousin William Herndon was Abraham Lincoln's law partner in Illinois. Chesley Coleman Herndon was a practicing attorney in Tulsa when he won several court victories against William Skelly involving oil leases on Osage Indian land. Mr. Skelly summoned Herndon to his office for a meeting after his final loss in court, and shortly thereafter, the two unlikely allies, along with Fred Pielsticker, the son of German immigrants who was orphaned at age twelve and became a renowned engineer, would form Skelly Oil Company. For the next thirty-seven years, Skelly and Herndon held the number one and two positions in the company, and are buried twenty-five feet apart in Tulsa's Rose Hill Mauseleum, the same distance as their desks for almost half a century. A 1932 Fortune Magazine article stated that "Skelly Oil Company is a great success because of the different temperaments of its top executives... in this company, William Skelly is the accelerator and Chesley Herndon is the brake."
The company entered in to the refining business by purchasing the Midland Refining Company in Eldorado, Kansas, in 1922. Throughout much of its history, Skelly was a popular gasoline marketer throughout the Midwestern United States and was a market leader in several cities throughout its marketing area including Tulsa, Oklahoma City, Kansas City, Wichita, Topeka, Omaha, Des Moines, Minneapolis/Saint Paul and other cities. Skelly's branded products included Skelly Regular, Powermax, Keotane and Skeltane gasolines; and Skelly Supreme, Tagolene and Ranger motor oils, and Skelgas propane products through Skelgas franchised stores. What may have been unique to Skelly, beginning in the late 1950's it offered its female customers a Ladies Credit Card in a shade of light blue.
Skelly was among the leading oil companies to develop a network of truck stops along major highways including the interstate during the 1950s and 1960s. Skelly also had a contract to sell gasoline at most locations of the now-defunct Nickerson Farms restaurant chain during the 1960s and 1970s, which was similar to Texaco's arrangement with Stuckey's.
Arts sponsorship
The company was well known as a sponsor of radio drama series The Air Adventures of Jimmie Allen and Captain Midnight. Also sponsor of Alex Drier news on ABC radio from Chicago in the late 1940's and early 1950's.
Mr. Skelly was a supporter of the University of Tulsa. He was instrumental in the creation of the University's radio station and it was assigned the call letters KWGS in his honor.
Skelly's great-granddaughter is currently working on a career in country music.
Getty takeover
William Skelly lost control of the company to J. Paul Getty in the 1930s.[2] The depression put Skelly in a financial strain. In order to reduce the payroll, some Skelly employees were transferred to Tidewater Associated Oil Company which was controlled by J. Paul Getty and his mother, Sarah C. Getty. In the late 1930's these employees were transferred back to Skelly. The Gettys made a cash loan to Skelly Oil and company treasury held stock and some of Mr. Skelly's stock were given as collateral for the loan. When the company was unable to repay the loan when it became due the stock was transferred to Mission Corporation, a holding company of the Getty's that also controlled Tidewater. Both Mr. Skelly and Mr. Herndon remained as CEO and Executive Vice President, respectively, until their deaths. Thereafter, Skelly executives remained as CEO's until the merger with Getty Oil Company. In the late 1960's Tidewater became Getty Oil Company. Skelly Oil was eventually merged into Getty Oil in 1977 and the Skelly brand (and associated brands) were discontinued.[3] Many former Skelly gas stations were rebranded to Getty, then to Texaco after Getty was acquired by Texaco in 1984.
References
- ↑ "Skelly Oil Company". Old Time Radio. http://www.otr.com/skelly.html. Retrieved 2007-05-13.
- ↑ "Boiling Oil". Time Magazine. 1948-01-05. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,794075,00.html. Retrieved 2007-05-13.
- ↑ "Frontier Eldorado Refining Company history". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. http://web.archive.org/web/20070927102812/http://www.frontieroil-eldorado.com/refinery_history.asp. Retrieved 2007-05-13.
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