Petroleum Center, Pennsylvania

Site of the former downtown of Petroleum Center, taken in 2009. Visible on the corner is part of the stone foundation of a bank building.

Petroleum Center is a populated place in Cornplanter Township, Venango County, Pennsylvania, United States. In the 19th century the name was also spelled "Petroleum Centre". The town today is almost deserted.

Geography

Petroleum Center is located at 41°30′58″N 79°40′57″W / 41.51611°N 79.68250°W / 41.51611; -79.68250 (41.516, -79.682), at an elevation of 1,070 feet above sea level, along the banks of Oil Creek. It is most easily found on local maps at the intersection of Petroleum Center Road and Russell Corners Road, within Oil Creek State Park, about 5 miles NNE of Oil City. Petroleum Center lies near the tracks of the Oil Creek and Titusville Railroad.

History

Main Street, Petroleum Center, in the 1800s.

As the name implies, Petroleum Center was developed during the Pennsylvanian oil rush of the mid-19th century. The first well was drilled on the George Washington McClintock Farm in 1860. Soon a small community grew about half way between Oil City and Titusville. George Henry Bissell, James Bishop and others formed the Central Petroleum Company which owned the farm in the beginning of 1866 when daily production topped 1,000 barrels per day. By the summer of 1866, over 3,000 people called the Centre home with a bank, two churches, a theater, a half-dozen hotels/boarding houses, and stores serving all the needs of the growing community. Bissel & Co. Banking House stimulated economic growth with its direct ties to financial institutions in New York City. President Ulysses S. Grant visited the town in 1871. When a fire devastated the nearby town of Pithole, Pennsylvania, that town's newspaper, the Pithole Daily Record, was relocated to Petroleum Center. The town was founded in 1866 and was essentially abandoned after 1873.

The town is the birthplace of Congressman James F. Burke.

See also

References

Giddens, Paul H. "The Birth of the Oil Industry" (New York: Macmillan co., 1938).

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/4/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.