Indian Refining Company

The Indian Refining Company was an American oil company in operation from the first decade of the 1900s to April 2, 1943. It was bought by the Texas Company in 1931. It had an oil refinery based in Lawrenceville, Illinois. Indian Refining patented the first "wax free" oil under the Havoline brand. The chemists at the Lawrenceville, Illinois refinery developed the wax free motor oil which led to an Indian Refining patent. The Texas Company (TEXACO) acquired Indian Refining in 1931 primarily to access the formulation for wax free motor oil, which was developed and is currently the standard for all conventional motor oils throughout the world.

Publications

  • Heavy liquid asphalt binder for road construction, liquid asphalt, road preserver and dust eliminator, 1909[1]
  • Inspection of refinery, Georgetown, Ky., by members of The National Petroleum Association, Independent Petroleum Marketers' Association, and by the governor and state officials of Kentucky, 1910[2]
  • The old costly method, the economical modern method, 1910[3]
  • Havoline tours, book 15, California, 1911[4]
  • Annual statement (date unknown)[5]
gollark: The spec, I mean. I don't think we managed to implement that because it makes no sense.
gollark: It has an innovative syntax-based type system.
gollark: For the lulz™, me and a friend wrote a partial exam board "pseudocode" to exam board "assembly" compiler.
gollark: The exam board for computer science here writes "pseudocode" in a deranged BASIC derivative which is actually fairly well specified.
gollark: I suppose someone (actually, many people) probably made a BASIC→JS compiler at some point.

References


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