building,
Coalinga Oil Field, ca. 1930.
Standard Oil of California (now
Chevron) remains a major operator at the Coalinga Field. Oil was known in the Coalinga area long before the arrival of Europeans, as the Native Americans in the region used the tarry substance from natural seeps as lining for baskets, as well as for trade. The first attempt to drill for oil was in 1867, but success was limited both due to the difficulty of transporting oil at the time, and the relative disinterest in petroleum prior to the era of motorized transport. In 1890 the first oil boom began, once the
Southern Pacific had extended its rail line into the town of Coalinga. Around the "Oil City" area of the Coalinga Field, directly north of the modern-day town of Coalinga, several large gushers attracted attention, gushers still being a relatively new occurrence in the oil industry. The "Blue Goose" well, drilled by the Home Oil Company to a depth , erupted in 1898, spewing over . The huge and productive Temblor oil pools were discovered around 1900, and by 1910 the field was the most richly productive oil field in California, exceeding those in the Los Angeles Basin for the first time. A dramatic
oil gusher erupted in Sept. 1909 at the "Silver Tip" well, producing 20,000 barrels a day, the biggest gusher in California until then. This was an event of such excitement that
Los Angeles Stock Exchange closed down for a day so that its members could come by train to view it. This gusher would be dwarfed a year later by the colossal
Lakeview Gusher, by which California's largest oil field, the
Midway-Sunset in Kern County, was first known. In the early years of the field, competition was fierce between different oil companies, with a particularly sharp conflict between a group of independent oil producers and
Standard Oil, which operated as a gigantic trust until its breakup by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1911. According to an article published in the New York Times in 1905, Standard attempted to force its competitors out of business by artificially holding down the price of oil to as little as ten cents a barrel. The Coalinga independents responded by building a pipeline to San Francisco Bay, the construction of which was itself obstructed by continuous harassment from Standard, until the independents were finally successful by ruse: secretly building a real pipeline, while simultaneously seeming to work on a "dummy" pipeline in a more prominent location. During this time, the independent operators also accused the
Southern Pacific Railroad of working in conjunction with Standard to put them out of business. The operators of the Coalinga field attained peak production in 1912 – of oil – a value which was to decline steadily for the next several decades.
Royal Dutch-Shell acquired
William Miller Graham's California Oilfields Limited in 1913. During the 1960s and 1970s,
enhanced recovery technologies such as water flooding, steam flooding, fire flooding, and polymer flooding were employed to increase the declining productivity of the field, and to reach and recover previously submarginal deposits. Even with such methods, the current oil output of the field has declined considerably from the early part of the 20th century: in 2006, the field's operators reported of oil pumped. ==References==