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The search for petroleum in Illinois occurred years before the boom days of the early 1900s. Wells were first drilled in 1865 near the town of Casey and then in other areas within the state for the next 40 years with very limited success. Renewed interest in the Casey area resulted in an oil discovery in 1905, followed by significant discoveries in Crawford and Lawrence Counties in 1906, pushing the state's oil production that year to 4.4 million barrels. Towns near the oil fields, such as Oblong, Robinson, Casey, Lawrenceville, and Bridgeport, experienced rapid population growth. Oil refineries near Chicago and St. Louis and in southeastern Illinois provided additional employment. The discovery of the Salem oil field in Marion County in 1938 initiated a major oil boom. By 1940, Illinois ranked third in the nation in oil production, providing a boast to the Allied forces' effort in Europe. Illinois continues to contribute to the petroleum industry of the United States, ranking fourth in crude oil refining and 16th in oil production.
Witnesses: Sen. Evan Bayh, Jeff Bingaman, Conrad Burns, Kent Conrad, Pete Domenici, Byron Dorgan, Peter Fitzgerald, Kay Bailey Hutchison, Tim Johnson, Mary Landrieu, Blanche Lincoln, Trent Lott, Frank Murkowski, Don Pickles, and Craig Thomas; Danny Biggs, Nat. Stripper Well Assoc.; Jonathan Cuneo, Amer. Antitrust Inst.; Gary Fonay, Lynx Petrol., Hobbs, NM; Dewey Bartlett, Jr., Keener Oil and Gas Co.; Jay Hakes, Energy Info. Admin., DoE; Steve Layton, Indep. Petrol. Assoc. of Amer.; John Lichtblau, Petrol. Ind. Res. Fdn.; Robert Palmer, Rowan Co., Inc.; L. R. Raymond, Exxon Corp.; and Ed Schafer, Gov., N.D, and Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Comm.
Horsley focuses on the contrasting environments within the state of Illinois and on the interactions of the inhabitants with their surroundings. He uses a standard Progressing from the physical and historical factors, through economic activities, concluding with chapters on Chicago and its suburbs. The text includes an urban-rural traverse across the state and a series of maps on presidential voting records by counties, 1960 to 1984.
This volume examines the social history of oil workers and investigates how labor relations have shaped the global oil industry during the twentieth century and today. It brings together the work of scholars from a range of disciplines, approaching the social, political, economic and cultural dimensions of oil. The contributors analyze a number of key oil producing regions, including the Americas, the Middle East, Central Asia, the Caucasus, Europe and Africa.