Volume 1 Issue 12, May, 2009 of The Pipeline
Transcription
Volume 1 Issue 12, May, 2009 of The Pipeline
The Pipeline Your Conduit for Information about Oil 150 P.O. BOX 128; OIL CITY, PA 16301-0128 VOLUME 1, ISSUE 12 May, 2009 ExxonMobil Joins Oil 150 Inside this issue: by Melissa Mann ExxonMobil Joins Oil 150 1 Mark’s Remarks 1 Venango Museum 2 Documentary Screening in Erie 3 Conference Photos Thank You to Donors 4-5 6 Featured Events June 6 &7, 2009, Barbara Morgan Harvey Center - Community History Days. The two-day festival at Venango Campus will feature lectures, displays, story telling, entertainment, great food, oil field equipment and activities for all ages celebrating the area's rich heritage. Contact Gina Knox at (814) 676-6591 ext. 1269. June 10, 2009, Benson Memorial Library Educational Program on Photography and Local History. A oneday event at Titusville’s Benson Memorial Library featuring a program on photography and local history. Contact Tara Bartely at (814) 827-2913. June 20, 2009, Oil 150 Invitational Rocket Launch. Join in on this highpowered launch, with over 20 rockets. There will also be displays, collectible models, and space-related magazines dating back to 1957. This event will be held at the Interstate Rocket Launch Facility, on Route 208 in Clintonville, Pennsylvania. Contact Marilyn Black, Oil Region Alliance (814) 677-3152 ext. 105 or mblack@oilregion.org. For More June Events, Visit Our Calendar at www.oil150.com Oil 150 is pleased to announce that ExxonMobil has joined in the celebration of the 150th anniversary of the Drake Well and the concurrent birth of the U.S. petroleum industry. On April 17, 2009, the ExxonMobil Foundation awarded Oil 150 a grant of $9,500 for support of the Oil 150 Nationwide Museum Kit Initiative. The ExxonMobil Foundation’s grant will help Oil 150 provide 250 oil, natural gas, children’s and science museums with free kits containing media, educational and promotional materials suitable and appropriate for their respective audiences. As the Oil 150 story unfolds around the nation, each museum community will be able to display its own unique oil history and tie that story back to its roots in the Pennsylvania Oil Region by building or enhancing their own exhibits with the components in the museum kits. The Oil 150 Nationwide Museum Kit Initiative is projected to generate 500,000 initial impressions. A significant portion of that number will visit oil-related heritage sites around the United States in 2009 and beyond. The program is managed by Ms. Melissa Mann, Oil 150 Deputy Director. For additional information or clarification, contact Ms. Mann at (800) 483-6264, Extension 103, or at mmann@oilregion.org. Editor’s Column--Mark’s Remarks The Marcellus Gas Play and the Short Line Railroad In the shadow of the Oil 150 Celebration marking the 150th anniversary of the world’s first commercial oil well struck near Titusville in northwestern Pennsylvania, is the Marcellus Natural Gas Play. Mark Heim The Marcellus Gas Field stretches from the south central Appalachians into the Finger Lakes Region of New York. Rising natural gas prices and the availability of the relatively new horizontal drilling and fracking processes make the Marcellus Shale Play a very attractive opportunity for energy providers and consumers alike. According to the Marcellus Shale Committee, an independent organization of oil and gas companies actively engaged in developing the Marcellus Shale Gas Play, in a report titled “The Economic Impact of the Oil and Gas Industry in Pennsylvania,” the number of new wells in the Commonwealth tripled between 2000 and 2007, from 1,354 to 4,148. These wells generated $1.2 billion in spending as a result of drilling activity across the Keystone State. The economic effect is significant. In 2007 there were 79,000 active gas wells in Pennsylvania, third highest in the nation. The Marcellus Shale Play not only benefits energy producers but also service companies. For example, one company benefiting from the active drilling of the Marcellus Shale in Central Pennsylvania is the Lycoming Valley Railroad. This short line railroad operates 38 miles of track in central Pennsylvania’s Lycoming and Clinton Counties. (Continued Page 4) PAGE 2 T HE PI PE LI N E VOLUME 1, ISSUE 12 Venango Museum: Black Gold or Black Magic? By Rebecca McElhatten Steering Committee Co-Chairs John E. Peterson, Retired Congressman Bruce Wells, American Oil & Gas Historical Society Lynn Cochran, Franklin Area Chamber of Commerce Members Janet McClintock Aaron, Legacy Family Carol Baker, Pennsylvania Independent Petroleum Producers Brenda Barrett, Bureau Director, PA DCNR Hon. Ronald Black, Retired Legislator Dr. William Brice, Petroleum History Institute Richard Castonguay, Municipal Leader Pamela Egbert Forker, Legacy Family Harvey Golubock, American Refining Group, Inc. Mark Heim, News Director, WKQW Radio PA Representative Scott Hutchinson Gary Hutchison, Educator and Area Historian Barbara Ives, Field Representative, U.S. Congressman Glenn Thompson Steve Kosak, Kosak & Associates Thomas Lopus, Quest Eastern Resource, on behalf of the Independent Petroleum Association of America (IPAA) Lois McElwee, Senior Project Manager and Oil Historian Carolee Michener, Venango County Historical Society Dr. Christopher Reber, Clarion University of Pennsylvania Rhonda Reda, Ohio Oil and Gas Association Stephen W. Rhoads, Pennsylvania Oil & Gas Association J. Mickey Rowley, PA Department of Community and Economic Development Roger L. Sigworth, Retired Oil Industry Sales Dr. Donald B. Smith, Physician David Waples, National Fuel Gas and Natural Gas Author Frank Weltner, Master Mariner Commissioner Troy Wood, Venango County, Pennsylvania Larry D. Woodfork, West Virginia Geologist PA Senator Mary Jo Sanford White Barbara Zolli, Drake Well Museum Newsletter Editor-in-Chief - Mark Heim Student Editor - Rebecca McElhatten The Venango Museum of Art, Science & Industry in Oil City, Pennsylvania currently asks an important question of all its visitors: Is oil black gold or black magic? The arguments are strong for both sides of the debate, as the museum displays through its eleven exhibits. The museum building is on the National Register of Historic Places. It was built in 1905 in the Beaux Arts style and originally served as the Oil City Post Office. This stone building houses artifacts related to Venango County and its residents. The Venango Museum strives to provide an educational and cultural experience for all visitors. The Wurlitzer Organ of 1928 is the pride of the Venango Museum. It has been restored to work properly. The organ came from the Latonia Theatre in Oil City where it was used to play music during silent films. The museum staff can turn on the organ for each visitor who passes through the museum. As soon as the staff presses a button, the organ begins to play a delightful melody, which is joined by mechanically-played instruments. “Modern Alchemy” shows the uses of a barrel of oil. The wall-size pie chart shows that 47% of a barrel of oil is used to make gasoline. Another 27% is used to make diesel fuel and heating oil. The remainder is used in asphalt, plastics, and jet fuel. To understand the significance of this, the visitor moves on to the “Global Connections” display. Oil connects countries through economics and ecology. The countries of the world must work together to protect the global environment. Plastics, the auto industry, suburban living, and many common materials come from oil. “Asphalt Nation” has a hands-on wall that shows the differences between city living and suburban living. The material world uses oil to make many common materials. The museum utilizes another hands-on activity to show that materials like Styrofoam, nylon, and even bubble gum contain the products of oil. Oil is also a critical element of many wonders in healthcare and space exploration. Synthetic hip and knee parts, prosthetic heart valves, and artificial eyes are all made of plastics that use oil. Space suits, as well as divers’ neoprene suits, use materials made from oil. Without oil, we would not have knee replacements or space travel. In 2009, the museum is hosting an exhibit of Dr. Richard Dunlap’s photography. Overall, the photographs depicti how the oil region currently looks. Eighteen of these photographs are framed, showing how the oil industry blends with and clashes with nature. In the heart of the oil region, the Venango Museum of Art, Science & Industry explores this question through artifacts, replicas, and historical accounts. The museum is open Tuesday through Sunday and tour guides are available. Visit www.oilregion.org for more information or call the museum at (814) 676-2007. is an educational non-partisan celebration administered by the Oil Region Alliance of Business, Industry & Tourism (ORA). ORA is classified by the Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation. ORA is registered with the Pennsylvania Bureau of Charitable Organizations. ORA also administers the Oil Region National Heritage Area, designated by Congress in 2004. VO L UM E 1 , I S S UE 1 2 T HE PI PE LI N E PAGE 3 "The Valley that Changed the World" to Be Shown at Tom Ridge Environmental Center by Will Wingo The Tom Ridge Environmental Center, Presque Isle State Park, Erie, Pennsylvania will host a screening of The Valley that Changed the World on Thursday, June 25, 2009. The production will be presented on the "Big Green Screen" with a reception beginning at 6:30 pm and the film starting at 7:00 pm. The reception and screening are sponsored by the Great Lakes Region of the Pennsylvania Tourism Office and by the Oil Region Alliance. The Tom Ridge Environmental Center is located at the entrance to Presque Isle State Park at 301 Peninsula Drive. The reception and screening are free and open to the public. Preregistration is required and can be made by calling the Big Green Screen at 814-838-4123. Seating is limited to 175. Call early to insure seating. The Valley that Changed the World is a 2009 co-production of WQED Pittsburgh and the Oil Region Alliance of Business, Industry and Tourism. The 57 minute film chronicles the development of the circumstances that led to the drilling of the first successful commercial oil well by Edwin Drake in August, 1859, the subsequent "oil boom" in northwest Pennsylvania and the impact of the discovery on the world through modern times. The program will give you insights into the petroleum industry that you may have not realized-- how kerosene was the initial high demand product of petroleum and what John Wilkes Booth's relationship was to the oil boom. Randy Seitz, President of the ORA said: "This production is a "must see" for anyone interested in the historical connection that northwest Pennsylvania has to the most exciting 150 years of civilization." For more information, contact Will Wingo, Oil 150 Director, at (814) 6773152 or Holly Best, Assistant Park Manager at Presque Isle State Park, at (814) 833-7424. Now Available! “The Valley that Changed the World” Oil 150 Welcomes New Student Intern by Melissa Mann In May 2009, Oil 150 welcomes Oil City native Rebecca McElhatten as Student Editor. She will assist the Oil 150 team through the end of July 2009. A senior at Edinboro University of Pennsylvania, McElhatten is working toward a bachelor of arts degree in English with an emphasis on writing. During her 200-hour internship, she will work on a number of writing projects, including educational materials to be included in the Oil 150 Nationwide Museum Kit Initiative and in the Oil 150 Nationwide Poster Initiative, layout and editorial work on the monthly newsletter, news releases to area media, and historical markers for oil pioneers outside Pennsylvania. DVDs of the new 57-minute WQED PBS documentary highlighting the heritage of the oil industry are now available for $19.95. Visit www.oil150.com or one of Oil 150’s regional sales locations to purchase the DVD and other commemorative products, apparel, fine oil history prints, oil history books and much more. PAGE 4 T HE PI PE LI N E VOLUME 1, ISSUE 12 Oil 150 and Oil Region Alliance Host Conferences Between April 30 and May 16, 2009, the Oil Region Alliance and Oil 150 hosted four conferences in the Oil Region National Heritage Area, including the 2009 Pennsylvania Outdoor Writers Association Conference, the 10th Annual Preserving Victorian Collections & Architecture Conference, the West Penn Energy Association ADDC Region I Field Trip, and the Petroleum History Institute’s 2009 Symposium and Field Trips. The following images highlight some of the events conference attendees enjoyed. Left: ORA Project Manager Mike Henderson, pictured here at Freedom Falls in Rockland, led a full-day clinic on photographing waterfalls and water for Pennsylvania Outdoor Writers Association members. Below (l to r): Darla Guyer, Thelma Clark, Betty Dietz, and Connie Rosenberry pose in front of the Caboose Motel at Titusville’s Perry Street Station, one of the stops on the full-day POWA Spouses Tour. (Photos by Kim Harris) Left: Catherine M. V. Thuro, an expert in the field of kerosene lighting, inspects a lamp during her featured talk at the 10th Annual Preserving Victorian Collections & Architecture Conference. Right: Saeed Dubas speaks about his Victorian home in Titusville, PA. Mr. and Mrs. Dubas received the 2009 Historic Preservation Award for Restoration at the Historic Preservation Awards ceremony held on May 9, 2009. (Photos by Marilyn Black) (Continued from Page 1) Mark’s Remarks: Shortline Railroad It is a part of the North Shore Railroad System and runs west from Muncy in Lycoming County to Avis in Clinton County, serving Montoursville, Williamsport, Newberry, Linden and Jersey Shore - all located in Lycoming County. With regard to the Marcellus Shale Gas Play, the Lycoming Valley Railroad transports gas drilling supplies from warehouse to wellhead. A typical well requires three railcar loads of frack sand. Drillers break the rock apart with high pressure water down to depths of 10,000 feet. The fractures are kept open with sand, allowing the gas to escape after the water pressure is removed. Most of the sand comes from the Midwestern states and New Jersey to Williamsport on the Lycoming Valley Railroad. The Lycoming Valley Railroad also carries pipe in support of Marcellus Shale drilling operations. Transmission pipe is shipped into Williamsport from Birmingham, Alabama and from Youngstown, Ohio. The pipe comes loaded in specialized, flat cars. These pipe sections measure forty feet long and are loaded in two stacks per flat car, twenty sections of pipe depending on the diameter, ranging from 24 to 48 inches. A typical twenty-car load will carry as much as 16,000 linear feet of pipe. PAGE 5 T HE PI PE LI N E VOLUME 1, ISSUE 12 More 2009 Conference Photos Above Left: Oil historian Neil McElwee leads a bus tour of the Oil Region National Heritage Area during the West Penn Energy Association ADDC Region I Field Trip on May 15, 2009. The field trip included stops at Drake Well Museum and Park, Pithole, and Petroleum Centre and Rynd Farm in Oil Creek State Park. Above Right: Attendees of the West Penn Energy Association ADDC Region I Field Trip take time out for lunch at the Blue Canoe in Titusville, Pennsylvania. The brewery, which opened in 2008, serves a variety of beers brewed on the premises as well as a full kitchen menu. For more information, visit www.thebluecanoebrewery.com. (Photos by Natalie McClelland) Above: Members of the Petroleum History Institute visit McClintock Well #1, the world’s oldest continuously producing oil well. While at the well, PHI bottled its own souvenir oil from that day’s production. (Photo by Rasoul Sorkhabi) Right: Dr. Bill Brice (left) introduces Gregg E. Fairbrothers (right), Professor of Business Administration Tuck School of Business, Director of the Dartmouth Entrepreneurial Network, and Chair or the Dartmouth Regional Technology Center at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire. Mr. Fairbrothers gave the keynote address entitled “George Bissell: A case study in disruptive entrepreneurship and his entrepreneurial contributions to the betterment of society” during the PHI International Symposium. (Photo by Mike Henderson) PAGE 6 T HE PI PE LI N E VOLUME 1, ISSUE 12 Thank You, Oil 150 Donors! American Refining Group U.S. Department of Energy Baker Hughes Foundation Joy Mining Machinery County of Crawford, PA County of Venango, PA Universal Well Services, Inc. Henry B. Suhr, Jr. and Beverly L. Suhr Barr’s Insurance and James Hawkins Edward Jones Investments PA Department of Community and Economic Development Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources Pennsylvania Joint Legislative Air and Water Pollution Control and Conservation Committee Anonymous Betty Squire Carolee Michener Central Electric Cooperative Pennsylvania Humanities Council Dan and Darlene Twombly Darl and Marilyn Black Gary Hutchison Scott and Mary Beth Hutchinson Joanne Wolfe Quentin and Louise Wood Oil Region Alliance Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission Timothy Brooks, D.P.M. Clarion University Foundation Elizabeth S. Black Charitable Trust Orthopedics and Sports Medicine Associates - Dr. Donald Smith, Dr. Robert Woods and Dr. John Karian Frank and Phyllis Weltner National Park Service Armstrong Cable Janet McClintock Aaron Appalachian Regional Commission Staff William Wingo, Director Melissa Mann, Deputy Director Amy Nurss, Development Specialist Rebecca McElhatten, Student Editor www.oil150.com Linn Energy, LLC National Fuel Gas Distribution Corp. Petroleum History Institute Kapp Alloy and Wire, Inc. Oil Creek Railway Historical Society, Inc. Pennsylvania Oil and Gas Association Philo and Sarah Blaisdell Foundation American Oil and Gas Historical Society William and Heather Brice Larry Woodfork Moody and Associates Neil and Lois McElwee Ronald and Patricia Black Ohio Oil and Gas Association’s Energy Education Program PA CareerLink Edith Justus Charitable Trust Ken and Joan Hanson OMG Americas, Inc. Independent Oil & Gas Association of Pennsylvania Dr. & Mrs. Arthur William Phillips Charitable Trust National Fuel Gas Company Foundation Pennsylvania General Energy Company, LLC Association of Desk and Derrick Clubs Foundation President Township, Venango County International Oil Scouts Association City of Oil City Scrubgrass Township, Venango County New York State Oil Producers Association, Inc. Richard King Mellon Foundation American Association of Professional Landmen Educational Foundation, Inc. National Petrochemical and Refiners Association Cranberry Township, Venango County Franklin Bronze Plaques Randy Seitz, President/COO Marilyn Black, Vice-President for Heritage Development 217 Elm Street P.O. Box 128 Oil City, PA 16301-0128 814-677-3152 www.oilregion.org Catalyst Energy, Inc. Lambert and Martineau Kriebel Production Company Samuel Pratt, Jr. American Petroleum Institute Ron and Alice Shoup ExxonMobil Foundation Dennis Beggs Rod Griffin Sonja Hawkins Dave Pascale Dr. Chris Reber Thomas Surman Warren Thomas Barbara Zolli John Cramer Steve Hanna Jim Hawkins Betsy and David Kellner Mike and Christine Klapec Susan Smith Mike Adams Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Adams Jack and Pam Crawford George and Sharon Dorogy Pamela Forker Ron Gustafson Bruce and Libby Jenkins Daniel Leech Rainey Linn Bob McFate Lois Minnigh Mark and Carol Prokay Steve and Emmy Prokay Patty Reagle Matt and Sara Sampson Dave and Sue Straub George Thompson Susan Williams Ralph W. Baird Baird Petrophysical International Jack W. Corn This newsletter is copyrighted to OIL 150 at the Oil Region Alliance of Business, Industry & Tourism. Brief excerpts may be quoted so long as source is acknowledged. For longer excerpts, contact project staff. Articles and photos may be submitted for future editions. Authors and photographers are recognized but not compensated. Deadline for each edition is the 15th of the preceding month. The Pipeline is distributed electronically via www.oil150.com. Letters to the Editor may be addressed to Editor, Oil 150, P.O. Box 128, Oil City, PA 16301-0128.
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