Friday, October 4, 2019




tydol had a flying a logo chevron had a winged v while mobil had a winged horse (pegasus)

tydol was owned by standard oil from 1926 until bp bought it in 2000

winston churchill nationalised britain's controlling interest in bp in 1913

https://bit.ly/2Ooqv2X - tydol

https://bit.ly/2nRKyvJ - seven sisters




'The successor companies from Standard Oil's breakup form the core of today's US oil industry. (Several of these companies were considered among the Seven Sisters who dominated the industry worldwide for much of the 20th century.) They include:

Standard Oil of New Jersey (SONJ) - or Esso (S.O.), or Jersey Standard – merged with Humble Oil to form Exxon, now part of ExxonMobil. Standard Trust companies Carter Oil, Imperial Oil (Canada), and Standard of Louisiana were kept as part of Standard Oil of New Jersey after the breakup.

Standard Oil of New York – or Socony, merged with Vacuum – renamed Mobil, now part of ExxonMobil.

Standard Oil of California – or Socal – renamed Chevron, became ChevronTexaco, but returned to Chevron.

Standard Oil of Indiana - or Stanolind, renamed Amoco (American Oil Co.) – now part of BP.

Standard's Atlantic and the independent company Richfieldmerged to form Atlantic Richfield Company or ARCO, subsequently became part of BP, and has since been sold to Tesoro. Atlantic operations were spun off and bought by Sunoco.

Standard Oil of Kentucky – or Kyso – was acquired by Standard Oil of California, currently Chevron.

The Standard Oil Company (Ohio) – or Sohio – the original Standard Oil corporate entity, acquired by BP in 1987.

The Ohio Oil Co. – or The Ohio – marketed gasoline under the Marathon name. The company is now known as Marathon Petroleum, and was often a rival with the in-state Standard spinoff, Sohio.'
standard oil wiki



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