I recently received an email from the gentleman behind the KoHoSo.us website.
KoHoSo.us is a fascinating collection images of classic
Americana "celebrating the 20th Century." These include vintage
magazine ads and photographs, all presented in a fun and thought-provoking
manner on the well-designed website.
Anyway, the KoHoSo.us webmaster sent me the link to
a photo from 1974 that he thought I might enjoy.
"Just in case you have never seen or used this, I had
an old photo from Lorain show up among the many people I follow on
Flickr," he noted. "I'm passing it along just in case it is new
to you and might be of interest."
Indeed it was. Here is the photo he was talking about. It
dates from 1974 and was posted on Flickr by Jeff Lonto.
As soon as I saw the photo, I knew exactly where it was
taken. In case it doesn't immediately ring a bell, Jeff's well-written
description tells the story.
His caption reads, "Black and white snapshot of an
American (Amoco/Standard) gas station dated 1974, in Lorain, Ohio. According to
Alan Nagy, "Located at 6210 Middle Ridge Road, (north of Ohio Rt 2 exit
at Middle Ridge). The building is still there, it's now a used car lot).
"The station reopened as an Amoco in the fall of 1975.
It was vacant and boarded up for about eleven months. The gas pumps and signs
were reinstalled in the fall of 1975. The station was vacant again around 1991
or 1992.”
I thought the photo of the American gas station was
interesting because it was a nice reminder of the days when gas stations
associated with major oil companies dominated the urban landscape. These days,
it is difficult to find a real service station connected to a national brand
(especially in Cleveland where I work).
The American Oil Company was a unit of Indiana Standard Oil
Company, one of the many companies created when the Standard Oil Trust was
broken up in 1911. As explained in this Wiki entry, the Standard
name was used in a specific region (including Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan
and others) and the American name was used outside that region. Both brands
utilized the same oval layout with a torch in the middle for their logos.
Eventually, the American and Standard brands went
away and were replaced by
the Amoco name. Amoco later merged with BP, and the Amoco name for the most
part disappeared.
Surprisingly, BP relaunched the Amoco brand for some service stations in 2017.
Keep up the fascinating and interesting stories, Dan. Still looking forward to them everyday. A huge "Thank You!" Tim Burton, Denver, CO
ReplyDeleteThanks, Tim!
ReplyDeleteSorry I'm a bit behind on this but I haven't had time to catch up with what's been gathering in my RSS feed reader for a couple of weeks.
ReplyDeleteI am so glad you found that picture useful. Coincidentally, today's post on KoHoSo.us celebrates the 79th anniversary of one of the ads in your post from back in January, That Telephone Guy...and, yes, I do indeed put things in my queue that far in advance. :^)