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Sinclair Oil Corporation

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Sinclair Oil Corporation
Company typePublic until 1969
Subsidiary, 1969–1976
Private, 1976–2022
IndustryOil and gasoline
FoundedMay 1, 1916; 109 years ago (1916-05-01)
FounderHarry F. Sinclair
DefunctMarch 15, 2022; 3 years ago (2022-03-15)
FateMostly acquired by HollyFrontier
SuccessorHF Sinclair Corporation
Headquarters,
Key people
Robert E. Holding, former CEO and Owner
Carol Holding (CEO)[1]
OwnerHolding family[2]
Number of employees
1,200 (2019)[1]
Websitesinclairoil.com

Sinclair Oil Corporation was an American petroleum corporation founded by Harry F. Sinclair on May 1, 1916. The Sinclair Oil and Refining Corporation amalgamated the assets of 6 small petroleum companies.[3] Originally a New York corporation, Sinclair Oil reincorporated in Wyoming in 1976.[4] The corporate logo featured the silhouette of a large green Brontosaurus dinosaur, based on the then-common idea that oil deposits beneath the earth came from the dead bodies of dinosaurs.

Sinclair was ranked as one of the largest privately owned American corporations.[1] It owned and operated refineries, gas stations, hotels, a ski resort, and a cattle ranch.[1]

History

[edit]

Sinclair has long been a fixture on American roads with its dinosaur logo and mascot, a Brontosaurus.

1916–1969

[edit]

Color code: upstream, midstream, downstream, exploration

Sinclair Oil & Refining subsidiaries
Company Incorp Date Par Authorized (shares) Issued Owned by Sinclair Bonds owned by parent[a] Capital surplus Loans due to parent
1917-03-12[5] 1916-05-01 1916-05-01[5] 1917-01-31[5]
[6]1919-09-23 1917-05-01 [7]1917-06-30 [7]1917-06-30
Sinclair Oil & Refining Corp New York Apr 27, 1916 no par 1,000,000 970,074[c] (parent)
2,500,000[10] 1,447,982
Sinclair Oil & Gas Co. Maine Apr 25, 1916 $100 100,000 100,000 100% $7m $14,716,689 $8,221,823
101,000 101,000 0 $15,060,311
Sinclair-Cudahy Pipe Line Co. 20,000 20,000 $1m 0 $1,862,180
45,000 45,000 0 $5,915,832
Sinclair Refining Co.[d] Oct 19, 1908 80,000 20,000 $8m $4,858,011 $2,506,487
80,000 0 $4,947,566 $14,310,504
Exchange Oil Co. Apr 29, 1916 100 100 0 $11,050 $29,738
incorporated after initial formation
Sinclair Coal Co.[e] Maine Apr 4, 1919 $100 4,000 1,770 100%
War Pipe Line Co.[f] July 21, 1918 30,500 500
Sinclair Building Co.[g] New York June 6, 1919 30,000 4,228
Oil production in...
x 1,000 barrels[15][16]
Kansas Oklahoma Texas Mexico
1901 179 10 4,394 10
1902 332 37 18,084 40
1903 932 139 17,956 75
1904 4,251 1,367 22,241 126
1905 12,014 28,136 251
1906 21,718 12,568 503
1907 2,410 43,542 12,323 1,005
1908 1,801 45,799 11,207 1,933
1909 1,264 47,859 9,534 2,714
1910 1,128 52,029 8,899 3,634
1911 1,279 56,069 9,526 12,553
1912 1,593 51,427 11,735 16,558
1913 2,375 63,579 15,010 25,696
1914 3,104 73,632 20,068 26,235
1915 2,823 97,915 24,943 32,911
1916 8,738 107,072 27,645 39,817
1917 36,536 107,508 32,413 55,293
1918 45,451 103,347 38,750 63,828
1919 33,048 86,911 79,366 87,073
1920 39,005 106,206 96,868 157,069

The "$50,000,000 corporation"[17] commenced business on May 1, 1916. The assets of Sinclair were the amalgamation of a number of small concerns, but principally of:

  • Cudahy Refining Co.
  • Chanute Refining Co.
  • Milliken Refining Co.
  • Milliken Pipe Line Co.
  • Slick Oil Co.[h]
  • Beaver Oil & Gas Co. (Bald Hill[17])[5]

On behalf of underwriters of Sinclair securities the properties were appraised thusly (according to the Magazine of Wall Street): 100,000 acres of land leases including 7,197 acres drilled and producing at 15,000bpd: $30,565,200 ($5,000,000 of that the market value of undeveloped land). Refineries, pipe lines, etc: $10,000,000.[19] This however contradicts the company books, which gave an appraised value of: $30,565,200 (Sinclair Oil & Gas), $3,049,296 (Sinclair-Cudahy Pipe Line), $13,377,554 (Sinclair Refining), $10,000 (Exchange Oil): total: $47,002,049.[5]

On date of incorporation Sinclair issued $16 million in convertible bonds and $4 million more before January. Before May 1, 1917, 98% were converted to common stock and the rest retired.[i] The 520,000 shares of common stock began trading at $50, placing the value of the company's securities on the market in May 1916 at $42 million.[19]

Sinclair owned 4 refineries: Vinita (12,000bpd in 1917) [j], Cushing (8,000bpd) [k], Chanute (2,500bpd)[l], Coffeyville (4,000bpd) [m] and 1 minor refinery in Muskogee (800bpd). At the time of incorporation the 5 refineries had a combined capacity of 20,000 barrels per day.[5] Additional refineries were planned: Kansas City, a 5,000bpd plant, was connected to the new trunk line and in partial operation by November 1917; and a 10,000bpd refinery in Chicago.[32]

Sinclair also built 3 large casinghead gasoline plants in the Cushing field: No. 1 at Cleveland, No. 2 at Drumright (began operations on August 2, 1917), No. 3 at Shamrock. An estimated 250 such plants were built in the field from 1915 through 1917, many of them small independent operations.[33]

The pipe line system consisted of some 500 miles of trunk and gathering lines, including the Milliken 80 mile 6,000bpd 6-inch line from Cushing to Vinita (laid in 1915[34][35]), a 6,000bpd 4-inch line of Chanute Refining from Cushing field to Cushing refinery and 128 miles of a 6,000bpd line of Cudahy Refining from Coffeyville into Oklahoma.[19][36] Sinclair announced plans to build an 800 mile pipeline from Drumright to Chicago in September 1916. An 80-mile 8-inch lateral to this trunk line was completed about Feb 1, 1917 from the El Dorado field to Chanute.[5][37] The section from Chanute to Kansas City was completed about May 1917.[5] Fort Madison was reached in early November 1917.[38] Oil reached the Chicago refinery on March 12, 1918. In total 900 miles of 8-inch pipe had been laid from Drumright with one lateral to El Dorado.[39] A southern extension from Cushing to the Healdton field was completed after 85 days of work in July 1918.[40] A 6-inch lateral from Hominy to Billings (Garber field[n]) was completed in August 1918.[46] The War Pipe Line Co. completed 232 miles of trunk line loops in 1918 or 1919.[f] An 8-inch pipe from Ranger to Healdton was completed about July 4, 1919. A loop line from Healdton to Cushing was started in the summer of 1919, as well as a lateral westward from Healdton to the Burkburnett field. The pipelines south of Cushing were apparently built by the Sinclair Gulf Pipe Line Co.[47]

According to president H. F. Sinclair in a November 14, 1917 statement Sinclair Oil & Refining had assets of $80,000,000, including $24,000,000[o] invested from May 1, 1916 until June 30, 1917.[32]

In August 1917 Sinclair raised a further $20,000,000 with 3-year notes that carried stock purchase warrants. The notes were called in the summer of 1919, the warrants probably exercised at the same time and the bulk of the notes thus effectively converted to common stock.[t]

7% 3-year Notes Price Range[u]
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
1917 99 High 99 93+34 90 78
77 Low 77
1918 96 High 88 88+14 87 87+18 91+34 91+12 92 93+58 94+18 95 95+14 96
84+?? Low 84+?? 86+18 86 85 87 90 90+12 90+12 92 92 94+38 95
1919 100 High 96+58 96+14 97+38 99+78 100 100 100
95 Low 95 95 96 96 99+18 99+34 99+34
with attached warrants
1917 102 High 102 100 97 91
77 Low 100+12 94 92+12 77
1918 100 High 89+12 93+12 91 90 93+14 93 94 96+12 97+12 98+14 99+12 100
86 Low 86 89+14 88 87 89+12 92 93 93+14 95+18 96 97 99
1919 152 High 100 100 104+78 [v] 152 150+18 145 123+12
98+18 Low 99 98+18 99+14 103+12 127+12 132 135
Directors (11) and Officers[58][5]
Directors elected April 28, 1916
Name From Also Died
Harry Ford Sinclair New York City President
Albert Strauss
G. W. Davidson
Theodore Roosevelt Jr.
William H. Isom Chicago 2nd Vice President Nov 27, 1859 - Mar 23, 1929[59]
Joseph Michael Cudahy 1st Vice President, Treasurer Oct 25, 1947[60]
W. T. Fenton
E. B. Huston Tulsa
E. R. Kemp
E. W. Sinclair Secretary
H. P. Wright Kansas City
Sinclair Oil & Refining Common Price Range[w]
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
1917 59+34 High 59+34 59+14 57+78 57+18 46+38 43+34 38+38 36+14 32+12 31+14
25+14 Low 55+34 52+34 50+58 39+38 41+14 36+34 35 29+34 28+18 25+14
1918 39 High 34 39 35+38 29+38 30+78 34+38 34+14 33+38 34 38+58 38+34 34+58
25+14 Low 29+14 33 27+38 25+14 26+34 27+18 30+18 30+34 30+14 31+58 32+12 31+12
1919 69+34 High 36+34 37+78 47 61+12 69+34 68+14 66+34 60+38 62+58
33+14 Low 33+14 33+58 35+38 44+34 58+12 52 58+14 51+34 57+38


Sinclair Gulf Corporation subsidiaries (1919)[6]
Company Incorp Date Par Authorized (shares) Issued Owned by Sinclair Gulf
Sinclair Gulf Corp New York Jan 9, 1917 no par 2,000,000 1,000,000 (parent)
Sinclair Gulf Oil Co. Maine Jan 6, 1917 $100 66,000 66,000 100%
Sinclair Gulf Pipe Line Co. Jun 1, 1917 35,000 15,000
Sinclair Gulf Refining Co. Nov 4, 1917 20,000 2,000
Sinclair Cuba Oil Co. Delaware Sep 12, 1917 10,000 1,020
Mexican Sinclair Petroleum Corp Dec 4, 1917 50,000 25,010
Sinclair Navigation Co. Apr 23, 1917 50,000 32,510
Freeport & Tampico Fuel Oil Corp Virginia [x]Apr 17, 1914 103,000 99,645
Freeport & Mexican Fuel Oil Corp May 27, 1912 40,000 10,900 [y]100%
Freeport & Tampico Fuel Oil Transportation Corp Delaware Apr 11, 1914 500 500
Sinclair Central American Oil Corp New York Jan 26, 1917 no par 1,000,000 743,100 444,100
Costa Rica Oil Corp[z] Delaware Mar 25, 1916 $10 200,000 200,000 [aa]
Sinclair Panama Oil Corp[ab] May 8, 1917 $10 500,000 500,000
American Storage Co. New Jersey Apr 30, 1891 $100 1,750 1,150 671
(old) Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp subsidiaries[6]
Company Incorp Date Par Authorized Issued Owned by SCO
(old) Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp Delaware May 8, 1919 no par 4,000,000 1,000,000 (former parent)
(old) Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp New York Jul 29, 1919 no par 1,000,000 1,000,000 (parent)
Sinclair Consolidated Oil & Gas Co. Delaware Jun 13, 1919 $100 100,000 5,000 100%
Sinclair Oil Co of Louisiana, Inc Louisiana Jul 28, 1919 10,000 5,000
Union Petroleum Co.[ac] Delaware Jun 11, 1904 10,000 10,000 9,639
Sinclair Central American Oil Corp see above 268,038
Sinclair Oil & Refining Corp 170,000
Sinclair Gulf Corp 390,000

The (new) Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp was incorporated on September 23, 1919 in New York[80] to absorb these 3 holding companies, which where then dissolved.[ad]

A sum of approximately $50 million was raised in an October 1919 stock sale (a common stock capital increase of 30%) to be spend on refinery upgrades, Louisiana oil leases and a pipeline in Louisiana and Texas.[ae]

A shareholder vote on May 19, 1920 approved:

  • 4 quarterly stock dividends of 2%[af]
  • authorization of 1,000,000 par $100 shares of preferred stock
  • authorization of $75,000,000 face amount of 7.5% convertible[ag] 5-year notes and issuance of $50 million thereof
  • number of directors increased from 17 to 23[88][89]

During 1922, Sinclair acquired in exchange for 250,000 shares of its own common stock 500,500 class A and 1,500 class B shares of the Mammoth Oil Co., slightly more than 25% of the capital, while SInclair also held an option to acquire more shares sufficient to gain control of Mammoth.[87] Sinclair's interest was however still a bit above 25% two years later in March 1924.[90]

In 1923 $25,000,000 15-year 6.5% bonds were sold to finance existing short term debt and future expenditures both relating to the construction of the Marcus Hook refinery and the enlargement of the refineries at East Chicago and Houston - to bring the capacity of the company to 75,000bpd, and to treble the capacity for gasoline production.[ah]

Mammoth Oil Company
The Mammoth Oil Company was incorporated in Delaware on February 28, 1922 with an authorized capital of $100,000,000.[91]
Sinclair Consolidated Common Price Range[w]
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
1919 64+14 High 61+78 63 64+14 47+78
41+18 Low 58+38 58+34 45+18 41+18
1920 48+34 High 48+34 41+38 45+38 44+38 37+38 32+34 33+14 29+14 35+12 33 33+18 27+12
20 Low 40+34 34+34 38+12 33+18 28+34 30+18 26 23+18 28+34 30+18 23+12 20
1921 28+38 High 25+58 25+14 24+78 28+14 28+38 24 21+12 20+78 21 24 24+12 23+12
16+18 Low 22+34 22+12 19+78 22+58 23+38 17+34 19+12 16+18 18+14 19+34 22+38 21+18
1922 38+34 High 21+58 23+12 25+12 34+78 37+14 38+34 33+12 33+78 33+38 37+34 34+38 35
18+34 Low 18+34 19 20+12 24 30+12 30+34 29+12 30+18 32+12 31+34 30+14 31
1923 39+38 High 35+78 35+14 39+38 38+34 32+38 30 25+18 23+18 21+34 19+34 23+58 27+34
16 Low 31+78 32 33 30+14 27+34 22+34 21+78 19+38 16 17+38 17+14 22+34
1924 27+18 High 27+18 24+58 23+78 23+18 20+78 19+34 19+18 18+58 18+78 17+58 19 17+14
15 Low 21+58 19+58 21 19+78 18+18 17+78 15 16+14 15+58 15+18 15+14 15+12
1925 24+78 High 24+14 24+78 20 20+34 22 24+38 23+14 21+14 19+58 20+34 22 23+78
17 Low 17 20+12 18 18+14 18+78 20+18 20+58 18+12 18 18 19+14 20+18
1926 24+78 High 24 24+78 23+34 22+38 23+38 23+14 22+78 22+12 22+14 19+78 18+34 20+78
16+34 Low 20+12 22+34 19+78 19+38 20+12 21+78 20 20+12 18+12 16+34 17+18 17+34
1927 22+38 High 22+38 22+18 20+34 18+38 18+14 18+14 17 18 18+14 17 17+58 22+14
15 Low 19 20+12 17+18 16+12 16+12 16 16 16+14 16+12 15 15+14 16+12
1928 46+34 High 21+14 20+34 29+58 30+34 30 27 26+78 29+12 32+12 39+12 46+34 45+12
17+34 Low 19+12 17+34 19+12 26+38 24+12 21 23 25 25+12 27+58 37+12 35
1929 45 High 45 42+12 42+12 41 40+78 40+14 37+38 39+12 38+12 36+34 30 28+14
21 Low 36+14 36 35+12 37 37+14 35+18 33 31+12 34 22+12 21 22+58
1930 32 High 25+34 25+78 29+34 32 30 29+12 26+38 25+14 22+14 18+18 14+18 13+18
9+34 Low 23+12 21+58 24+18 28+58 24+78 20 21+14 20 16 13 11+38 9+34
Sinclair Consolidated 8% Preferred Price Range[w]
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
1922 101 High 101 99+58 100+12
97+78 Low 97+78 98 98
1923 99+18 High 99 99+18 98+34 98+12 96+12 95+12 93+14 89 83+34 84+12 87 86+12
80+14 Low 97+14 96+12 96 97 94 93 88+14 80+14 80+58 82+38 80+78 85
1924 90 High 90 84+12 84 84+14 81 87 88+18 84+12 83 82+12 82 81+78
75 Low 86 80+14 82 82+12 77 78 79 82 81 75 78+14 76
1925 94+18 High 93 94+18 89+12 89 91 94 94+18 92 88+12 91+12 90+12 92
78+34 Low 78+34 89 83+12 85 82+12 90 93 89 87+12 88+34 87+12 89+14
1926 99+12 High 95 95 94 94+78 96+12 99+12 99+12 99+38 98+78 96+18 95+12 98+78
90 Low 91 93+14 90 91 92+34 95+34 98 98 96 94+12 93+12 96
1927 110 High 103+14 103 102 102 100+14 110 98+12 99+12 100+14 100+34 99+12 104+12
97 Low 97 100+34 99 99 98+12 97+38 97+12 98 98+12 99+18 97+34 99+12
1928 110 High 108 107 109+18 109+12 109 108+12 109+38 107+34 108 110 109 109+58
102+12 Low 102+12 103+14 104 107+12 107+12 107+58 108+12 106+12 107+12 107+34 107 107+14
1929 111 High 111 110 110 110+34 108+12 109+14 110 109+14 109+38 110 107+34 109+58
103 Low 109+12 109+34 109 109 107+34 108+34 109 109 108+12 103 105 108+18
1930 112+14 High 111 110+12 111+78 112+14 110+12 110 111+34 110+38 110+34 110+14 107+34 100
86 Low 109 109 109+12 111+34 109+12 108 110 109+34 110+38 106 103 86
7.5% Notes Price Range[ai]
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
1921 101+12 High 93+38 94+34 92+78 92 93+14 93+12 94+78 101+12 100+12
90+18 Low 91+58 92+12 90+12 90+14 90+18 90+12 92+34 94+58 97+12
1922 110+78 High 102+18 102 104 105+34 106+34 105 104+58 104+78 106+12 110+78 103
98 Low 98 99+58 101+58 103+38 104 103+78 104 103+12 104+58 102+78 102+78
Annual Reports
Year Ended Dec 31
1922 [94]
1923 [95]
1924 [96]
1925 [97]
1926 [98]
1927 [99]
1928 [100]
1929 [101]
1930 [102]
Semi-Annual 6 Months Ended June 30
1924 [103]
Shares outstanding
Date Common 8% Preferred 5-year 7.5% conv. notes 1920
Sep 23, 1919 2,887,982 n/a [6]
Nov 1919 3.756,584 [104]
Dec 31, 1919 3,757,593 [105]
Dec 31, 1920 3,909,944 2,477 [aj]$47,504,000 n/a [106][86]
Dec 31, 1921 4,067,698 3,224 45,441,600
Mar 11, 1922 4,067,698 3,224 46,429,600 [107]
Jul 31, 1922 4,194,778 11,543 [ak]45,609,000 [108]
Date Common 8% Preferred 15-year 7% bonds 1922 series A 15-year 6.5% bonds 1923 series B[ah] 3-year 6% bonds 1924 series C[al]
Dec 31, 1922 [am]4,491,892 200,000 $50,000,000 n/a [87]
Dec 31, 1923 4,491,892 192,786 48,973,000 $25,000,000 [96]
Nov 14, 1924 189,149 48,424,000 24,432,000 $15,000,000 [111]
Dec 31, 1924 185,411 47,875.500 24,432,000 15,000,000 [96]
Dec 31, 1925 4,499,162 178,522 46,829,500 23,875,000 15,000,000 [114][97]
Dec 31, 1926 4,509,481 172,100 45,566,500 23,339,500 [an]12,350,600 [98]
Date Common 8% Preferred 15-year 7% bonds 1922 series A 15-year 6.5% bonds 1923 series B 3-year 6% bonds 1927 series D[ao]
Aug 12, 1927 [ap]4,509,481 169,070 $44,816,500 $23,086,500 0 [117]
Dec 31, 1927 166,046 44,057,500 22,831,500 $20,000,000 [99]
Dec 31, 1928 [aq]5,500,000 160,252 22,400,000 18,481,500 [100]
Dec 31, 1929 5,460,008 154,685 21,647,000 16,462,500 [101]
Dec 31, 1930 6,152,404 141,294 21,272,000 [102]
Dec 31, 1931 6,107,404 ? ? ? ? [118]: XXXII 
Maps
Date Detail
Nov 1918 pumping stations, distribution stations [119]
Nov 1919 pumping stations, distribution stations [104]
Nov 1920 pumping stations, distribution stations [80]
Feb 1921 (pretty and public domain) [120]
1929 [121]
1929 Wyoming: segment lengths, diameters, loops, junctions [122]
1929 North: segment lenghts, diameters, loops, junctions [123]
1929 South: segment lengths, diameters, loops, junctions [124]
Sinclair Pipe Line Co

The Sinclair Pipe Line Co was formerly the Sinclair-Cudahy Pipe Line Co. (renamed January 27, 1920) and apparently had absorbed the War Pipe Line Co and the Sinclair Gulf Pipe Line Co. at some point. In 1922 the authorized capital was 285,000 shares and 280,844 were outstanding. As a common carrier it had carried oil for Standard of Indiana for some time and Standard bought a 50% interest on February 10, 1921.[120][125] For its half interest Standard Oil of Indiana paid $16,390,000 in cash, the deal was completed a year and a half later when the stock of the pipe company was released from pledge under the indenture securing the 7.5% 5-year notes, which were called for redemption on Nov 15, 1922. Only then were the $16.39 million transferred.[126]

In June 1921 100 miles of gathering lines in Osage and north Tulsa counties reaching 150 producing properties were purchased from the Gulf Pipe Line Co (subsidiary of Gulf Refining Co.) to add 2,500bpd to the pipeline's upstream intake capacity.[127]

A 135 mile 8- and 10-inch extension from the Ranger field to Mexia was completed in April 1922. The company had begun gathering oil in the Mexia field on January 11, 1922 and by April had completed 34 tanks (2,370,000bbl) and collected 1,850,000bbl of oil and had another 2,240,000bbl of tanks under construction.[128]

Sinclair Pipe Line Co. sold at 95 and interest $25,000,000 of 20-year 5% bonds dated Oct 2, 1922. The proceeds of that issue were used for (a) an extension to Houston,[ar] (b) an extension into Wyoming,[as] (c) to increase by more than 100% the 20,000bpd capacity to Chicago where Sinclairs refinery and the Whiting refinery of Standard Oil were located.[at][134][107] The bonds were listed on the NYSE.[135][136] The volume of contracts for the 3 pipeline projects was about $50,000,000.[137]

Sinclair Texas Pipe Line Co
The company was incorporated on October 27, 1920 in Delaware.[80]
Tanker fleet
Freeport & Mexican Fuel Oil Transportation Co.[138]
Walter Hardcastle
Panuco
  • George Hawley
  • Gene Crawley1917
Sinclair Navigation Co.
Name Type Keel laid Launched Builder Delivered
Albert E. Watts 11kn Dec 28, 1920 Harlan and Hollingsworth [139]
E. R. Kemp 10.5kn Feb 12, 1921
E. W. Sinclair Mar 26, 1921
Samuel L. Fuller 10.5kn Dec 11, 1920 Sun Shipbuilding [140]
Joseph M. Cudahy Jan 8, 1921
J. Fletcher Farrell 430ft 11kn 10,600dwt Jun 10, 1921 Fore River [141][139]
William Boyce Thompson Nov 11, 1920 Jul 8, 1921
Virginia Sinclair 421ft 14kn 67,000bbl Oct 9, 1930 Fore River sister ships[142] $1.5m per ship[143]
Harry F. Sinclair Jr. Dec 1, 1930
Albert E. Watts Nov 17, 1940 Federal Shipbuilding [144]
Patrick J. Hurley
E. W. Sinclair
Jack Carnes
Sinclair Opaline 10,700dwt Nov 21, 1940 May 21, 1941 Fore River Aug 16, 1941 [145]
Sinclair Rubilene Mar 18, 1941 Aug 1, 1941
Sinclair Superflame May 31, 1941
Sinclair H-C
Flagship Sinco 15,450dwt Aug 9, 1941
Sheldon Clark

During September 1919, Harry Sinclair restructured Sinclair Oil and Refining Corporation, Sinclair Gulf Corporation, and 26 other related entities into Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corporation.[146] In 1932, this new entity was renamed Consolidated Oil Corporation. In 1943, it was renamed Sinclair Oil Corporation.[147]

Near the beginning of the Great Depression, Sinclair sold the remaining interest in its pipeline subsidiary to Standard Oil Company (Indiana) for US$72.5 million (Standard Oil had purchased a 50% interest in the pipeline subsidiary in 1921).[148] With these funds, including an additional US$33.5 million from an additional common stock issue, Sinclair retired several promissory notes and prepared to weather the Depression with the remaining supply of cash.

Between 1921 and 1922, Sinclair leased oil production rights to Teapot Dome in Wyoming without competitive bidding. This led to the Teapot Dome scandal.[149]

A restored Sinclair station in Albany, Texas
A restored Sinclair station on the National Register of Historic Places

At the same time, Sinclair Oil was approached by the Italian fascist government. Benito Mussolini's government wanted to increase competition in the Italian oil market, which was controlled by the Italo-American Petroleum Society (SIAP), which in turn was fully dominated by Standard Oil.[150] As the Teapot Dome scandal unfolded in the United States and reached the international press, Mussolini accelerated the negotiations, with a deal signed on May 4, 1924 (although without an official meeting, to avoid public outcry). Because of this, Sinclair Oil Company is known for having made "large payments to leading Fascists — all acting as intermediaries for Benito Mussolini — in return for an exclusive monopoly to drill for oil on Italian soil and in the Italian colonies".[151] The deal was reported in a press release by the Head of Government (Mussolini) issued on the night of May 15, 1924, and published by most newspapers on the following day. The press release assured the public that Sinclair Oil had been awarded its contract on a competitive basis and had provided guarantees it had no relations with the international oil trust.[152] This case of corruption was reported by the anti-fascist politician Giacomo Matteotti - who was later kidnapped and killed by Mussolini's newborn secret police, just before he could report his discoveries to the Parliament — in his posthumous article, published in the July issue of English Life (a magazine founded by Brendan Bracken): Matteotti accused Sinclair Oil of being a pawn of Standard Oil, as well as revealing "grave irregularities concerning the concession."[153][154] Matteotti's theses were echoed in the notes of Epifanio Pennetta, who contributed to the preliminary investigation on the murder: "To all appearances," companies like Nafta and Saper "were in competition with the Sinclair company, while in fact they were in cahoots with Sinclair" and added that Sinclair Oil was actually working "in concert" with Standard Oil.[155]

During the Great Depression, Sinclair saved many other petroleum companies from receivership or bankruptcy and acquired others to expand its operations. In 1932, Sinclair purchased the assets[au] of Prairie Oil and Gas' pipeline and producing companies in the southern United States, and the Rio Grande Oil Company in California.[160] The purchase of Prairie also gave Sinclair a 65% interest in Producers and Refiners Corporation (or Parco), which Sinclair subsequently acquired when Parco entered receivership in 1934. Lastly, in 1936, Sinclair purchased the East Coast marketing subsidiary of Richfield Oil Company, which had operated in receivership for several years. Richfield then reorganized, resulting in the creation of the Richfield Oil Corporation. Sinclair was instrumental in transferring capital and managerial assets into Richfield. Thirty years later, Richfield merged with Atlantic Refining, located on the East Coast, forming Atlantic Richfield.[161]

Sinclair Dinoland plastic brontosaurus, 1964, in the collection of The Children's Museum of Indianapolis

Sinclair acquired the Pierce Petroleum Corporation in 1930 and the Penn-Mex Fuel Company in 1932.

In the early 1960s, Sinclair, along with Henry W. Peters and his son Eric Woods, developed the Turbo-S aircraft oils used for reliability in commercial jets, military jets, guided missiles and space exploration rockets.[162]

Fortune 500 rankings
in millions of dollars[163]
Year Revenue Rank Profits Rank Assets Rank
1955 1,021.5 21 91.6 13 1,186.8 14
1956
1957 1,180.1 24 95.9 17 1,473.3 13
1958 1,251.1 24 79.3 21 1,480.6 15
1959
1960
1961 1,222.4 29 52.5 36 1,486.6 20
1962
1963
1964
1965 1,187.3 46 58.7 55 1,637.6 22
1966 1,275.5 44 76.7 49 1,694.5 27
1967
1968 1,483.1 47 95.4 44 1,810.2 36
1969 1,465.1 58 76.6 64 1,851.3 39

ARCO era

[edit]

In 1969, Sinclair merged with the Atlantic Richfield Company (ARCO) after an attempted acquisition by the Gulf+Western Industries Corporation. Federal antitrust provisions required the new entity to divest itself of certain Sinclair assets. As a result, the East Coast operations of Sinclair were sold to BP. After the ARCO acquisition, many Sinclair stations in the Midwest continued to use the dinosaur logo and opted out of using ARCO's "diamond spark" logo. Some northwest Sinclair stations partially retained the Sinclair brand for a time, using ARCO's blue rectangular logo, including the "spark" graphic, but with the word "Sinclair" substituted for ARCO.

Holding era

[edit]
Restored Sinclair gas pump

In 1976, ARCO spun off Sinclair by selling certain assets to Robert (Earl) Holding. Assets divested in the spin-off included ARCO's retail operations in the region bounded by the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains, and the rights to the Sinclair brand and logo, resulting in many stations along Interstate 80 keeping the dinosaur logo. The ARCO stations in Texas, New Mexico, Illinois, and some portions of Oklahoma were not affected by the divestiture. They continued as part of ARCO until ARCO pulled out of those states in the 1980s.

Headquartered in Salt Lake City, Sinclair was the 94th-largest private company in the United States.[164] There were 2,607 Sinclair filling stations in 20 states in the Western and Midwestern United States. As of 2010, the corporation operated two refineries—one in Casper, Wyoming, and one in Sinclair, Wyoming. Sinclair operated a third refinery in Tulsa, Oklahoma, until it was sold to Holly Corporation on December 1, 2009. Sinclair's other operations included 1,000 miles of pipeline.

In the mid-2010s, Sinclair fuel stations began actively spreading across southern California, including Los Angeles, San Diego, and Fresno, with holders offering attractive deals for potential clients to make the switch from a private brand to the Sinclair name brand.[165]

By 2018, Sinclair gas stations were widely distributed across the United States, with dozens of gas stations in California, Colorado, Iowa, Idaho, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming; smaller numbers in Arizona, Connecticut, Kansas, Kentucky, North Dakota, New Mexico, New York, Texas, and Washington; and a single station in Arkansas and Wisconsin.[166]

Sinclair continued to use the green dinosaur, affectionately called "Dino", and marketed all its products under the logo. Sinclair patented the gasoline additive SG-2000. The high-octane fuel blend was called "Dino Supreme" and regular gas was "Dino", trade names used since 1961 when many oil companies still used trade names for their fuels instead of generic terms such as "regular," "premium," or "unleaded". Before that time, Sinclair's trade names for its gasoline products included "Power X" for high-octane fuel and "Sinclair H-C" for regular gas. Sinclair also has marketed products such as Dino, Dino Supreme, and Opaline motor oils.

Sinclair filling station along Idaho Street (Interstate 80 Business) near College Avenue in Elko, Nevada.

In August 2021, HollyFrontier announced the acquisition of Sinclair Oil. A new company named HF Sinclair Corporation would be formed in 2022. Under the agreements, Sinclair Oil's branded marketing business and all related commercial activities and its refineries and related operations and assets in Casper and Sinclair, Wyoming, would be combined with HollyFrontier. Sinclair Oil's logistics and storage assets, including approximately 1,200 miles of pipelines, two crude oil terminals and eight light product terminals, would be combined with Holly Energy Partners (HEP). It was expected that the vast majority of Sinclair Oil employees would be invited to continue in their positions following the combination. The transaction did not include exploration and production assets owned by Sinclair Oil & Gas Co.[167]

Sinclair Trucking Company

[edit]

Company-owned Sinclair Trucking[168] provided distribution for Sinclair Oil fuels and other related products. Terminals were located in:

Grand America Hotels & Resorts

[edit]

Sinclair also owned and operated Grand America Hotels & Resorts, which has hotel properties in Salt Lake City, Utah; Flagstaff, Arizona; Cheyenne, Wyoming; Little America, Wyoming; and San Diego, California, in addition to the Sun Valley and Snowbasin ski resorts. These properties were not part of the sale to HollyFrontier, and continue to be owned by the Holding Family.

HF Sinclair Corporation

[edit]

In March 2022, the sale to HollyFrontier was completed, and HF Sinclair Corporation traded on the NYSE under the ticker symbol DINO.[169]

[edit]
Old Sinclair Dino gas pump

At the Chicago World's Fair of 1933–1934, Sinclair sponsored a dinosaur exhibit meant to play on the link between the formation of petroleum deposits and the time of dinosaurs, now a largely discredited misconception.[170][171] The exhibit included a 2-ton animated model of a Brontosaurus.[172] The exhibit proved so popular it inspired a promotional line of rubber brontosaurs at Sinclair stations, complete with wiggling heads and tails, and the eventual inclusion of the brontosaur logo. Later, inflatable dinosaurs were given as promotional items. An anthropomorphic version appeared as a service-station attendant in advertisements. Some locations have a life-size model of the mascot straddling the building's entrance.

At the New York World's Fair of 1964–1965, Sinclair again sponsored a dinosaur exhibit, "Dinoland", featuring life-size replicas of nine different dinosaurs, including their signature Brontosaurus. Souvenirs from the exhibit included a brochure ("Sinclair and the Exciting World of Dinosaurs") and featured molded plastic dinosaur figurines. After the Fair closed, Dinoland remained as a traveling exhibit.[172][173][174]

Two of the replicas (Tyrannosaurus and Brontosaurus) are still on display at Dinosaur Valley State Park near Glen Rose, Texas.[174][175][176] Another, a model of a Trachodon, has been displayed at Brookfield Zoo outside Chicago, Illinois.[174] A replica of a Triceratops is owned by the Kentucky Science Center in Louisville, Kentucky and after a 2022 restoration was mounted above their parking garage.[177] The Ankylosaurus is at the Houston Museum of Natural Science's Sugar Lands location. The Ornithomimus is at the Milwaukee Public Museum. The Stegosaurus is on display in front of the Visitor Center of Dinosaur National Monument in Utah. A copy of the Triceratops is also owned by the Smithsonian Institution and is on display as "Uncle Beazley" in the National Zoological Park in Washington, D.C.[178]

The "Sinclair's Dino" balloon first appeared in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in 1963, returning to the parade in 2015 after a more than 50-year absence. The balloon is an honorary member of New York's Museum of Natural History as of 1977. It is 36 feet (11 m) tall, 72 feet (22 m) long, and 24 feet (7.3 m) wide.[179]

The Brontosaurus logo is parodied in the Toy Story and Cars franchise films as being the "Dinoco" gas station chain, perhaps an allusion to gasoline and its origin as a fossil fuel, as well as a portmanteau between the "dinosaur" in Sinclair's logo and the suffixes of the "Amoco", "Conoco", and "Sunoco" franchises.[citation needed]

The TV series Dinosaurs featured several characters with names derived from fossil fuel companies. The main character and his family had the surname Sinclair.

Sinclair once had a service station in Montgomery, Alabama, in the Cloverdale neighborhood, that closed in the 1970s. That location was remodeled in 1992 into a restaurant named Sinclair's in honor of the former neighborhood station. The ownership group also opened two other locations, one at Lake Martin and one on the eastside. The lake and Cloverdale locations were closed by 2018, while the eastside location has flourished for nearly 30 years as of 2023.

Joey Jordison, founding drummer of Slipknot, worked at a Sinclair's garage in Urbandale, Iowa, where late at night the band would discuss their plans.

Distribution

[edit]

Sinclair bought in February 1929 the physical assets (50 service stations, 100 dealer outlets) of the Puritan Oil Co. of St. Louis.[180]

March 1929, the Central Ohio Oil Co. of Columbus, one of the largest and oldest in the state.[181]

During the first 10 months of 1930 Sinclair Refining, the marketing subsidiary of Sinclair Oil, acquired a total of 1,511 bulk distribution plants, service stations and re-sale outlets and the businesses of the 59 associated companies. In addition Sinclair acquired 7 bulk plants and 52 service stations from individuals and acquired long-term leases on 10 bulk plants and 169 service stations.

Companies acquired in 1930[182]
Alabama 2 Petroleum Products Co. (La Fayette), Consumers Oil Co. (Bay Minette)
Arkansas 5 Home Oil Co. (Ashdon), Royal Oil Co. (Little Rock), Warden Oil Co. (North L. Rock), Burton Oil Co. (Nettleton), Guenters Inc. (Little Rock)
Connecticut 2 Thomaston Land & Impr. Co. (Thomaston), Paramount Oil Co. (New Haven)
Georgia 1 Marion County Oil Co (Buena Vista)
Illinois 2 Kay Oil Co. (Pontiac), Red Eagle Oil Co. (Canton)
Louisiana 1 Liberty Products Co. (Ponchatoula)
Michigan 2 Des Jardins Oil Co. (Marquette), Decker Oil & Gas Co. (Decker)
Mississippi 1 Winston Oil Co. (Noxapater)
New York 5 Seider Oil Co. (Hamburg), Superb Oil Co. (Haverstraw), Fay C. Adams Oil Co. (Syracuse), Kissan Oil Co. (Watkins Glen), Conine & Cooper (Bath)
North Carolina 4 Piedmont Oil Co. (Gastonia), Imperial Gas & Oil Co. (Winston-Salem), Napoleon Oil Co. (Marion), Cleveland Oil Co. (Shelby)
Ohio 5 Public Service Oil Co. (east-central Ohio), H. R. Johnson Oil Co. (Baltimore), Court Gas & Supply Co. (Marietta), Regal Oil Co. (Piqua), Community Oil Co. (Jackson Center)
Pennsylvania 1 Crader Oil & Supply Co. (Towanda)
South Carolina 4 Swansea Gas & Oil Co. (Swansea), Superior Oil Co. (Batesburg), Calvert Oil Co. (Abbeville), Citizens Oil Co. (Seneca)
Texas 14 Brazos Oil Co. (Richmond), Sanders Oil Co. (Brenham), Blalock's Tire Store (Huntsville), Gerlach Bros. (Livingston), Dixon Oil Co. (Burton), Home Petroleum Co. (Huntsville), Arnst Bros. (Kingsville), Willis Mercantile Co. (Willis), Home Petroleum Co. (Madisonville), Waller County Oil Co. (Waller), Home Oil Co. (Sweetwater), Doupbitt & McAskill (Edinburg), Eagle Lake Grain Co. (Eagle Lake), Perry Oil Co. (Freeport)
Virginia 7 Fulton Oil Co. (Gate City), Russel Gas Co. (Honaker), Midland Oil & Gas Co. (Abingdon), Blue Ridge Oil Co. (The Plains), U.S. Oil Co. (South Hill), Monticello Oil & Gas Co. (Charlottesville), Central Oil Co. (Norton)
W. Virginia 1 Arrowhead Gasoline Co. (Cameron)
Wisconsin 2 Conley Oil Co. (Eau Claire), Eagle Oil Co. (Shawano)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^ "Holding family". forbes.com. Retrieved September 29, 2019.
  3. ^ "Wall Street Bankers Finance Oil Combine For First Time". Archived from the original on June 13, 2011. Retrieved October 19, 2007.
  4. ^ Wyoming Secretary of State, Corporations Division. Search keyword = Sinclair. 2nd page. CID 198000134254. Retrieved January 12, 2007. Archived August 2, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
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  14. ^ "(no title)". The Magazine of Wall Street. Vol. 24, no. 5. 21 June 1919. p. 442. {{cite news}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
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  60. ^ "J. M. Cudahy Dies". The Atlanta Constitution. Vol. 80, no. 133. 26 October 1947. p. 6-D.
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  102. ^ a b "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Annual Report Ended Dec 31, 1930". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 132, no. 3434. 18 April 1931. p. 2950.
  103. ^ "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Semi-Annual Report - 6 Months Ended June 30, 1924". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 119, no. 3085. 9 August 1924. p. 690.
  104. ^ a b "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Organization". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 109, no. 2840. 29 November 1919. p. 215.
  105. ^ "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp - Consolidated Balance Sheet at Dec 31, 1919". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 110, no. 2861. 24 April 1920. p. xxvii.
  106. ^ "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Preliminary Consolidated Balance Sheet Dec 31, 1921". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 114, no. 2960. 18 March 1922. p. 1174.
  107. ^ a b "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Bonds Sold - Outstanding Notes to be Redeemed". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 114, no. 2960. 18 March 1922. p. 1188.
  108. ^ "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Preferred Stock Offering". The Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 115, no. 2990. 14 October 1922. p. 1739.
  109. ^ "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Bonds Sold". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 116, no. 3025. 16 June 1923. p. 2777.
  110. ^ "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Listing". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 116, no. 3027. 30 June 1923. p. 3007.
  111. ^ a b "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Bonds Sold". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 119, no. 3100. 22 November 1924. p. 2419.
  112. ^ "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Listing". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 120, no. 3108. 17 January 1925. p. 343.
  113. ^ "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Stock Purchase Warrants". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 121, no. 3153. 28 November 1925. p. 2650.
  114. ^ "zbw.eu Sinclair Oil Corp document collection".
  115. ^ "Notice of Redemption - Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - First Lien Collateral Gold Bonds Series C". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 122, no. 3178. 22 May 1926. p. XXVI.
  116. ^ "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - To Call Bonds". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 122, no. 3177. 15 May 1926. p. 2812.
  117. ^ a b "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Bonds Sold". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 125, no. 3243. 20 August 1927. p. 1064.
  118. ^ Report on Pipe Lines (Report). 1933.
  119. ^ "Sinclair Oil & Refining Corp. - Organization". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 107, no. 2784. 2 November 1918. p. 185.
  120. ^ a b "Standard of Indiana Buys Half Interest in Sinclair Pipeline Co". National Petroleum News. Vol. 13, no. 7. 16 February 1921. p. 24.
  121. ^ "Map of Oil Trunk Pipelines in the United States". The Oil and Gas Journal. Vol. 28. 29 August 1929.
  122. ^ "Sinclair Pipe Line Co. Map (Wyoming)". The Oil and Gas Journal. Vol. 28. 29 August 1929. p. T-84.
  123. ^ "Sinclair Pipe Line Co. Map (north)". The Oil and Gas Journal. Vol. 28. 29 August 1929. p. T-85.
  124. ^ "Sinclair Pipe Line Co. Map (south)". The Oil and Gas Journal. Vol. 28. 29 August 1929. p. T-88.
  125. ^ "Application A-5867 (November 15, 1922)". Listing Statements of the New York Stock Exchange (Aug 1922 - Dec 1922). Vol. 23. 1922. p. 4403.
  126. ^ "$45,000,000 Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corporation - First Lien Collateral 15-year 7% Gold Bonds". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 114, no. 2960. 18 March 1922. p. XXXVIII.
  127. ^ "Sinclair Pipe Line Co. - Acquires Additional Pipe Line". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 112, no. 2920. 11 June 1921. p. 2544.
  128. ^ "Sinclair Pipe Line Co. - Mexia Pipe Line". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 114, no. 2963. 8 April 1922. p. 1543.
  129. ^ "Tank Wagon Advances Feature Gulf Market". The Oil and Gas Journal. Vol. 21, no. 36. 1 February 1923. p. 62.
  130. ^ "Pipe Contract for Sinclair Line has been Awarded". The Oil and Gas Journal. Vol. 21, no. 38. 15 February 1923. p. 66.
  131. ^ a b "Sinclair to Run Salt Creek Oil to Storage Tanks". The Oil and Gas Journal. Vol. 21, no. 41. 8 March 1923. p. 16.
  132. ^ "Sinclair Company Awards 2 More Large Contracts". The Oil and Gas Journal. Vol. 21, no. 43. 22 March 1923. p. 66.
  133. ^ "The Story of Two High Grade Fields". The Oil and Gas Journal. Vol. 21, no. 41. 8 March 1923. p. 94.
  134. ^ "Sinclair Pipe Line Co. - Bonds Sold". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 115, no. 2986. 16 September 1922. p. 1331.
  135. ^ "Sinclair Pipe Line Co. - Listing". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 115, no. 2999. 16 December 1922. p. 2695.
  136. ^ "A-5867 (Nov 15, 1922)". Listing Statements of the New York Stock Exchange (Aug - Dec 1922). Vol. 23. 1922. p. 4402.
  137. ^ "Sinclair Pipe Line Co. Spending About $50,000,000 on Lines Alone". The Oil and Gas Journal. Vol. 21, no. 41. 8 March 1923. p. 50.
  138. ^ "Mexico". Oil, Paint and Drug Reporter. Vol. 92, no. 13. 24 September 1917. p. 61.
  139. ^ a b "1921 Construction Record of U. S. Yards". The Marine Review. February 1922. p. 75.
  140. ^ "1921 Construction Record of U. S. Yards". The Marine Review. February 1922. p. 78.
  141. ^ "Eastern Building Returns - Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp - Fore River Plant". Pacific Marine Review. August 1921. p. 511.
  142. ^ "Bethlehem Launches Tanker". Pacific Marine Review. November 1930. p. 498.
  143. ^ "Another Sinclair Tanker". The Oil and Gas Journal. Vol. 29, no. 29. 4 December 1930. p. 146.
  144. ^ "Progress in American Shipyards - Federal SB". Pacific Marine Review. March 1941. p. 76.
  145. ^ "Progress in American Shipyards - Fore River". Pacific Marine Review. September 1941. p. 99.
  146. ^ "New Domain is Four Times Size of Former Corporation With International Markets". Archived from the original on April 27, 2015. Retrieved October 19, 2007.
  147. ^ "Prairie Joins Sinclair". Archived from the original on April 27, 2015. Retrieved October 19, 2007.
  148. ^ "During Depression Years Canny Sale, Purchases Double Sinclair in Size". Archived from the original on April 27, 2015. Retrieved October 19, 2007.
  149. ^ "Teapot Dome Scandal". HISTORY. June 10, 2019. Retrieved April 14, 2020.
  150. ^ Canali, Mauro (2009). "The Matteotti murder and the origins of Mussolini's totalitarian Fascist regime in Italy". Journal of Modern Italian Studies. 14 (2): 159. doi:10.1080/13545710902826378. S2CID 143963988.
  151. ^ Canali, Mauro (2009). "The Matteotti murder and the origins of Mussolini's totalitarian Fascist regime in Italy". Journal of Modern Italian Studies. 14 (2): 143–167. doi:10.1080/13545710902826378. S2CID 143963988.
  152. ^ Italian Government (16 May 1924). "L'estrazione degli olii minerari e la convenzione con la "Sinclair" (Comunicato del Governo)" [The extraction of mineral oils and the contract with Sinclair (Government Press Release)]. La Stampa (in Italian). Turin. Retrieved 18 January 2019.
  153. ^ Matteotti, Giacomo (1924). "Machiavelli, Mussolini and Fascism". English Life. 3 (2): 86–87.
  154. ^ Canali, Mauro (2009). "The Matteotti murder and the origins of Mussolini's totalitarian Fascist regime in Italy". Journal of Modern Italian Studies. 14 (2): 162. doi:10.1080/13545710902826378. S2CID 143963988.
  155. ^ Canali, Mauro (2009). "The Matteotti murder and the origins of Mussolini's totalitarian Fascist regime in Italy". Journal of Modern Italian Studies. 14 (2): 162–163. doi:10.1080/13545710902826378. S2CID 143963988.
  156. ^ "Prairie Oil & Gas Co. - To Exchange Stock". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 134, no. 3482. 19 March 1932. p. 2167.
  157. ^ "Prairie Pipe Line Co. - Receivership Asked". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 134, no. 3492. 28 May 1932. p. 3994.
  158. ^ "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Consolidation Approved". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 134, no. 3480. 5 March 1932. p. 1780.
  159. ^ "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Stockholder to Protest Merger of Prairie Pipe Line". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 134, no. 3476. 6 February 1932. p. 1043.
  160. ^ Jakle, John A.; Sculle, Keith (1994). The Gas Station in America. The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-4723-0.
  161. ^ "Richfield Also Salvaged". Archived from the original on April 27, 2015. Retrieved October 19, 2007.
  162. ^ Sinclair Turbo-S Oils. Aviation Week & Space Technology, May 13, 1963, v. 78, No. 19, p. 46.
  163. ^ "Fortune 500 Companies by Year: S". Archived from the original on 7 December 2023.
  164. ^ "Sinclair Oil on the Forbes America's Largest Private Companies List". Forbes. Retrieved Feb 15, 2022.
  165. ^ "Gas from the past now pumps in Coronado". Retrieved 2018-01-11.
  166. ^ "Locations".
  167. ^ "HollyFrontier Corporation and Holly Energy Partners Announce Combination with Sinclair Oil and Formation of HF Sinclair Corporation". hollyfrontier.com. 2021-08-03. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
  168. ^ "Trucking Services".
  169. ^ "HollyFrontier and Holly Energy Partners Announce Completion of Transactions with The Sinclair Companies and Establishment of New Parent Company, HF Sinclair Corporation". hfsinclair.com. 2022-03-14. Retrieved 2022-03-30.
  170. ^ "petroleum - Origin of hydrocarbons | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2021-11-23.
  171. ^ Nersesian, Roy L. (2010). Energy for the 21st Century, A Comprehensive Guide to Conventional and Alternative Sources, Second Edition. Armonk, New York: M.E. Sharp, Inc. p. 181. ISBN 978-0-7656-2412-3.
  172. ^ a b (1) "Dinosaur Fever – Sinclair's Icon". Petroleum History Almanac. Washington, D.C.: American Oil & Gas Historical Society. 2016. Archived from the original on April 10, 2016. Retrieved July 2, 2016.
  173. ^ "Sinclair's New York World's Fair (1964–65) "Dinoland" Pavilion". Sinclair History. Sinclair Oil Corporation. 2013. Archived from the original on May 9, 2015. Retrieved July 11, 2016.
  174. ^ a b c "Sinclair Dinoland: New York World's Fair 1964–65". Science Leads the Way. Frank J. Leskovitz. 2016. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved July 2, 2016.
  175. ^ "Dinosaur Valley State Park – Texas Parks & Wildlife Department". tpwd.texas.gov.
  176. ^ "Dinosaur Valley State Park, Glen Rose, Texas". RoadsideAmerica.com.
  177. ^ "Triceratops".
  178. ^ (1} Goode, James M. (1974). Uncle Beazley. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press. p. 260. ISBN 9780881032338. OCLC 2610663. Retrieved 2016-07-04. This 25-foot long replica of a Triceratops ... was placed on the Mall in 1967 ...
    The full-size Triceratops replica and eight other types of dinosaurs were designed by two prominent paleontologists, Dr. Barnum Brown of the American Museum of Natural History, in New York City, and Dr. John Ostrom of the Peabody Museum, in Peabody, Massachusetts. The sculptor, Louis Paul Jonas, executed these prehistoric animals in fiberglass, after the designs of Barnum and Ostrom, for the Sinclair Refining Company's Pavilion at the New York World's Fair of 1964. After the Fair closed, the nine dinosaurs, which weighed between 2 and 4 tons each, were placed on trucks and taken on a tour of the Eastern United States. The Sinclair Refining Company promoted the tour for public relations and advertising, since their trademark was the dinosaur. In 1967, the nine dinosaurs were given to various American museums.
    This particular replica was used for the filming of The Enormous Egg, a movie made by the National Broadcasting Company for television, based on a children's book of the same name by Oliver Buttersworth. The movie features an enormous egg, out of which hatches a baby Triceratops; the boy consults with the Smithsonian Institution, which accepts Uncle Beazley for the National Zoo.
    {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
    (2)"A Dinosaur at the Zoo". Art at the National Zoo. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian National Zoological Park. Archived from the original on June 12, 2007. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
    (3) "Uncle Beazley's Family Tree". Geocache: National Museum of Natural History Geotour. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. June 25, 2016. Archived from the original on July 1, 2016. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  179. ^ "Sinclair's Dino" Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade website
  180. ^ "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Acquisition". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 128, no. 3322. 23 February 1929. p. 1246.
  181. ^ "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Acquisition". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 128, no. 3326. 23 March 1929. p. 1924.
  182. ^ "Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp. - Marketing Subsidiary Acquired [...] 59 Petroleum Marketing Companies During First 10 Months". Commercial and Financial Chronicle. Vol. 131, no. 3411. 8 November 1930. p. 3053.
  1. ^ 10-year 7% bonds dated May 1, 1916 and owned by Sinclair Oil & Refining, all retired May 1, 1917
    • Sinclair Oil & Gas: $12,000,000 authorized, $7,000,000 issued
    • Sinclair-Cudahy Pipe Line: $2,000,000 authorized, $1,000,000 issued
    • Sinclair Refining: $12,000,000 authorized, $8,000,000 issued[5]
  2. ^ Figure does not include any shares resulting from bond conversion[9]
  3. ^ 520,000 outstanding on May 1, 1916. Of the remainder 363,637 reserved for conversion of the 10-year bonds and 116,363 unissued. On March 12, 1917 348,666 shares plus 621,408 temporary certificates were outstanding (total 970,074).[8][9] Outstanding on the first 7 dividend dates were:
    • Aug 10, 1916: 520,000
    • Nov 15, 1916: 623,598[b]
    • Feb 20, 1917: 966,971
    • May 19, 1917: 1,000,000
    • ...
    • Feb 28, 1918: 1,000,000[6]
    1,447,982.5 shares were outstanding at the time of dissolution in 1919.[6]
  4. ^ at the time of formation and until January 25, 1917 was named Cudahy Refining Company
  5. ^ Owned 11,000 acres of coal lands in Illinois. The coal was used in the company's own refineries.
  6. ^ a b The War Pipe Line Co. line was supposed to run on the Sinclair right-of-way (and use enlarged Sinclair pumping stations) from Drumright to Whiting, from were Standard OIl lines to the Atlantic Seaboard would have been supplied with an extra 10,000-12,000bpd, all financially backed by the government.[11] At the end of September 1918 the first 30 or so miles from Drumright northwards were finished.[12] Eventually only 232 miles were completed from Drumright to Freeman. The pipe line was leased to Sinclair-Cudahy Pipe Line Co and sometime after April 1919 the stock was acquired.[13] The company issued $2,750,000 in 7% notes dated Apr 22, 1919:
    • Series A, due Apr 22, 1920: $250,000
    • Series B, due Apr 22, 1921: $500,000
    • Series C, due Apr 22, 1922: $2,000,000
  7. ^ presumably owned the Liberty Tower (Manhattan), which was purchased by Sinclair in June 1919 for approximately $2,000,000[14]
  8. ^ Founded in October 1914 and for a rumored $2,000,000 took over the property of Thomas Baker Slick Sr. in the Cushing field, to wit: 30 wells producing 4,414bpd and a large acreage. Company was a 50-50 joint venture of Okla Oil Co (Tide Water Oil Co.) and Milliken Oil Co.[18]
  9. ^ Sinclair offered $16,000,000 of an authorized issue of $20,000,000 of 10-year 6% bonds dated May 1, 1916 and convertible until May 1, 1917 to one share of no par common stock for each $55 par value of the bonds, and for $57.50 thereafter.[20] The entire issue was sold by June.[21] Some time later (after Oct 31[9]) the issue was increased to $20 million; $419,000 were retired through the sinking fund on Nov 1, 1916 and shortly thereafter large amounts of bonds were converted (ca. $2,600,000).[9][22] On the New York Curb Market the common stock fell to 35+14 in August, but rose to 67+18 in December, well above profitability of conversion.[23] Eventually $419k were retired, $17,951,500 converted and $1,629,500 called on May 1, 1917.[24] Since the decision to call the bonds for redemption was made when a syndicate underwrote a stock issue at $60.50 per share to cover the funds needed to call the bonds, the $1,629,500 were effectively also converted.[25] The conversion privilege for the remaining $17,000,000[26] ended upon the January 11[27] notice of call on February 8, 1917.[5]
  10. ^ Was built by the Milliken Refining Co. in 1910 at a cost of $1,000,000 and by 1916 a wax plant and other improvement brought the investment to $2 million and plant capacity to 6,000bpd.[17] in 1922/1923 the plant was moved to and consolidated with the Muskogee refinery.[28] On Plate 12 of the 1916 Sanborn Fire Insurance map
  11. ^ Built by the Chanute Refining Co. in 1914 for $600,000, by 1916 was a $1.5 million 4,000bpd plant.[17] On Plate 15 of the 1917 and on Plate 27 of the 1924 Sanborn Fire Insurance map. The plant in the summer of 1925 was the smallest Sinclair refinery and produced 4% of its gasoline, when it was closed.[29]
  12. ^ Built by the Chanute Refining Co. in 1907 for $300,000, by 1916 was a $1,000,000 plant of 2,000bpd.[17] On Plate 19 of the 1916 Sanborn Fire Insurance map.
  13. ^ Built at 37°03′02″N 95°37′58″W / 37.05051°N 95.63286°W / 37.05051; -95.63286 by the Cudahy Refining Co. in the beginning of 1909, together with a 3- and 4-inch 5,000bpd pipe line from Alluwe (ca. 30 miles), which was put into operation on March 20, 1909.[30][31] Refinery on Plate 23 of the 1913 and Plate 29 and 30 of the 1923 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map
  14. ^ The Chanute Refining Co. began drilling on their 13,000 leased acres about March 1916,[41] Sinclair struck 45° oil in September,[42] the first find in all of Garfield county,[43] on the Hoy farm in the northeast corner of S25-T22N-R4W[44] and began shipments to Vinita by rail.[9] In January 1919 Sinclair out of its cash reserve bought the remaining half interest in the Garber field holdings, which was producing 3,000bpd from 60 wells at the time.[45]
  15. ^ $6,829,678 invested from May 1, 1916 to Oct 31, 1916[9]
  16. ^
    • until Aug 1, 1918: 105 and interest
    • until Aug 1, 1919: 102+12 and interest
    • thereafter: par and interest
  17. ^
    • May 1, 1918: $500,000
    • Nov 1, 1918: $500,000
    • May 1, 1919: $750,000
    • Nov 1, 1919: $750,000
  18. ^ For each $1000 face amount of notes entitling the holder the purchase of 25 shares of common stock at a price of:
    • until Aug 1, 1918: $45
    • until Aug 1, 1919: $47.50
    • until Feb 1, 1920: $50

    The capital was increased from 1,000,000 shares to 1,500,000 shares (application for NYSE listing: [7]), all of which were reserved for the exercise of warrants. All cash so obtained was to be used to buy on the market or to call more of the notes.

  19. ^ the right to subscribe to $20 face amount of notes for each share held
  20. ^ On July 24, 1917 shareholders approved[48] the underwritten sale of $20,000,000 of 3-year 7% callable[p] sinking fund[q] notes with detachable stock warrants[r] dated August 1, 1917 to existing shareholders pro rata[s] to fund the ongoing expansion of the business from acquisition of land leases to the establishment of distribution stations and everything in between,[49] including the retirement of $10,160,000 in existing short term debt outstanding on June 30, 1917. The notes were listed on the NYSE.[50][51] On June 30, 1918 $18,900,800[52] and on Dec 31, 1918 $18,046,800 were outstanding.[53] Given the depressed stock price of Sinclair and the note buyback obligation of the warrants, this probably means that essentially no warrants were exercised before 1919. Upon notice of call on July 3, 1919 all remaining notes were called for redemption on August 4, 1919.[54] Sinclair likely received about $21,279,145 from the sale of an estimated 447,982 shares of common stock at $47.50 in the summer of 1919 and from the apparent lack of other financing it can be presumed that most of these funds were used to redeem the notes.
  21. ^ 1917[55] 1918[56] 1919[57]
  22. ^ 102+12 must be a typo in the reference
  23. ^ a b c 1917[61] 1918[62] 1919[63] 1920[64] 1921[65] 1922[66] 1923[67] 1924[68] 1925[69] 1926[70] 1927[71] 1928[72] 1929[73] 1930[74]
  24. ^ interests of R. T. Wilson and E. F. Simms acquired by exchange of stock and representation on the Sinclair Gulf board in early March 1917.[75]
  25. ^ All stock owned by Freeport & Tampico Fuel Oil Corp
  26. ^ Owned a concession for 1,000,000 acres in the Republic of Costa Rica. A geological examination was made and in April 1920 one exploratory well was drilling.[76]
  27. ^ All stock owned by Sinclair Central American Oil Corp
  28. ^ Had a concession for 1,000,000 acres in the Republic of Panama. A geological examination was made and in April 1920 one exploratory well was drilling.[76]
  29. ^ Owned export stations at Marcus Hook and Westwego, extensive distribution facilities, notably at Philadelphia, Chicago and Kansas City, through a subsidiary a refinery in Wellsville[77], and pipe lines.[78] Refinery on 1903, 1909 and 1922 Sanborn Fire Insurance maps. Effective Aug 1, 1923 the Sinclair marketing and export business was consolidated in the Sinclair Refining Co; the Eastern Division was headquartered in New York City and headed by A. C. Woodman (president of Union Petroleum Co.), the Western Division was headquartered in Chicago. Union Petroleum Co. continued to maintain a selling branch in Philadelphia.[79]
  30. ^ The new company had an authorized capital of 5,500,000 shares of no par value. 1,277,982 shares were issued and exchanged one-for-one for the 1,447,982 outstanding shares of Sinclair Oil & Refining Corp, minus 170,000 held in the treasury. 610,000 shares were issued and exchanged for the outstanding 1,000,000 shares of Sinclair Gulf Corp, minus 390,000 in the treasury. 1,000,000 were issued and exchanged for 1,000,000 shares of Sinclair Consolidated Oil (incorp. July 29). Total issue: 2,887,982. The three former holding companies were dissolved and their operating companies became direct subsidiaries of the new Sinclair Consolidated Oil Corp (incorp. Sep 23).[6] A slightly different figure of 2,887,610 can also be found and those shares represented a total of $135,900,813.78 of paid in capital (average of about $47.06 per share).[81] The separate boards of directors approved the merger on August 25, 1919, the shareholders voted in favor in separate meetings on September 22.[82]
  31. ^ Stockholders were given the right to buy 0.3 shares for each share held at $60 per share with $3 per share fee to the underwriting syndicate which took up any shares remaining.[83][84] To be spend on: $23 million for doubling the capacity of the Coffeyville, Kansas City and Chicago refineries. cracking units at Coffeyville and Kansas CIty similar to the exiting units in Chicago, a 250 mile 20,000bpd 8-inch pipe line from Shreveport to the Houston Ship Channel, and a 50% interest in the Johnson, Hollingsworth and Polly leases in the Bull Bayou field (Louisiana).[85]
  32. ^ 2% of common stock outstanding on
    • Jun 30, 1920 (payable Jul 15)
    • Sep 30, 1920 (Oct 15)
    • Dec 31, 1920 (Jan 15)
    • Mar 31, 1921 (Apr 15)
    The dividend was cumulative, such that 100 shares owned on Jun 29, 1920 received 8.243216 shares in total by Apr 15, 1921.
    151,732.35 shares were paid in this way in 1920. Issued at $5 per share, $758,661.75 out of earned surplus.[86]
    157,567 shares were paid for this purpose in 1921, also issued at the rate of $5 on the balance sheet.[87]
  33. ^ $100 par value of the notes convertible to 1 share of preferred and 14 share of common stock
  34. ^ a b $25,000,000 15-year 6.5% bonds dated June 1, 1923 and sold at 94 and interest to yield 7.15%. Callable at XX and interest on or before Mar 14, 19YY:
    • 107+12: 1927
    • 105: 1932
    • 102+12: 1933
    • 102: 1934
    • 101+12: 1935
    • 101: 1936
    • 100+12: 1937
    • 100: 1938
    Sinking Fund sufficient to retire 50% of the bonds at maturity; to begin Apr 1, 1924 and paid in on Apr 1 and Oct 1 each year in cash to purchase at or below par and interest and to retire annually XX% of the maximum amount ever issued:
    • 2%: Apr 1, 1924 - Oct 1, 1927
    • 3%: Apr 1, 1928 - Apr 1, 1931
    • 4%: Oct 1, 1931 - Oct 1, 1934
    • 5%: Apr 1, 1935 - Apr 1, 1938

    [109] The bonds were listed on the NYSE.[110]

  35. ^ 1921[92] 1922[93]
  36. ^ 19,710 acquired for sinking fund, 2,773 in treasury, 2,477 converted
  37. ^ During FY ending Dec 31, 1922 a total of $46,434,600 were retired: $19,677,600 converted and the rest called with funds from the 15-year 7% bonds.[87]
  38. ^ $15,000,000 3-year 6% bonds dated Dec 1, 1924; callable at par and interest, but with uncancelled stock warrants at XX and interest on or before:
    • 105: Dec 1, 1925
    • 103: Dec 1, 1926
    • 101: Jun 1, 1927
    Non detachable stock warrants allowing for each $1,000 of bonds to purchase on or before XX: YY shares at $ZZ:
    • Dec 1, 1925: 50 shares at $20
    • Dec 1, 1926: 45 shares at $22.50
    • Jun 1, 1927: 40 shares at $25
    If bonds are called warrants became void 30 days before date of redemption.

    Proceeds to be used to settle essentially all remaining bank loans, chiefly arising out of increase of investment in Sinclair Crude Purchasing Co. from $10 million to $30 million.[111] The bonds were listed on the NYSE.[112] Briefly before the Dec 1, 1925 deadline Sinclair accepted bonds at face value in lieu of cash for the exercise of the stock warrants.[113]

  39. ^ 250,000 for Mammoth Oil and ca. 50,000 for notes conversion leaves approximately +125,000 not (yet) accounted for in 1922
  40. ^ The board pursuant to a May 12 vote with a May 15, 1926 notice called for redemption (paid out of current earnings) on July 31, 1926 $2,500,000 bonds with intact warrants and on July 16, 1926 $149,400 bonds with exercised warrants (all those that had been exercised). Furthermore the company announced an offer to buy until further notice at par and interest any bonds with exercised warrants.[115][116]
  41. ^ $20,000,000 of 3-year 6% bonds series D dated Sep 1, 1927 and sold for 99 and interest. Callable on or before XX at YY and interest:
    • Mar 1, 1928: 102
    • Sep 1, 1928: 101+12
    • Mar 1, 1929: 101
    • Sep 1, 1929: 100+12
    • thereafter:: 100
    Sinking fund for purchase of bonds not exceeding 100 and interest:
    • Mar 1, 1928: $500,000
    • Sep 1, 1928: $1,000,000
    • Mar 1, 1929: $1,000,000
    • Sep 1, 1929: $1,000,000
    • Mar 1, 1930: $1,000,000

    Proceeds to be used to retire $12,350,600 3-year series C bonds and pay for recent capital expenditures[117]

  42. ^ Clearly only 1% or 2% of the series C bond warrants were exercised
  43. ^ 1,130,000 shares sold in Oct 1928 for $30 per share
  44. ^ The diameter was 8-inch. At the end of January 1923, 10 miles had been laid from Houston, while simultaneously a crew worked from Mexia southwards.[129]
  45. ^ The contract for the 8- and 12-inch pipe was awarded to National Tube Co. and Mark Manufacturing Co., which began deliveries in the first quarter of 1923.[130] The first 50 miles from the Salt Creek Oil Field to the 7,200,000bbl tank farm of the Sinclair Crude Purchasing Co. at Clayton was completed about May 1, 1923.[131] The contracts for laying of the western 13 and the middle 13 of the line from Freeman, Mo. to Clayton, Wy were awarded in March 1923 with the contract for the eastern thrird still pending.[132]
  46. ^ A 35-mile 8-inch lateral from Burbank to the Tonkawa field was also built, running approximately parallel to and some 10 miles north of the Garber lateral.[131] Tonkawa was a field of high grade (43° Baume) crude. Two 4-inch lines with a combined 10,000bpd had been laid to connect it to Sinclairs Garber lateral and the new 8-inch lateral had a capacity of 20,000bpd.[133]
  47. ^ Sinclar offered one Sinclair share for each share of Prairie Oil & Gas and 1.4 shares for each share of Prairie Pipe Line Co.[156] The vote of shareholders of the 3 companies on March 1, 1932 was: Sinclar (70% of common and 74% of preferred in favor of merger), Prairie Oil & Gas Co (88.3% in favor) and Prairie Pipe Line Co (3,570,898 of 4,050,000 outstanding shares in favor - 88.17%). Sinclair shareholders ratified the change of name of the company to Consolidated Oil Corporation. Prairie Oil & Gas was renamed Commonwealth Oil & Gas Company, Prairie Pipe Line was renamed Commonwealth Transportation Company.[157][158] Kansas law required 80% approval for mergers.[159]
[edit]