Doheny was famous as the best oilman of his generation. In 1893, he became the first person to successfully drill for oil in Los Angeles, and he led the development of Southern California’s major oil fields. He went to Mexico in 1900 and carved an oil empire out of the jungle. Over the next twenty years, Doheny’s Mexican Petroleum Company produced more oil than any other organization in the world.
Because Doheny’s personal papers were destroyed after his death in 1935, there has been no previous systematic attempt to reconstruct his life. As a reappraisal of Doheny’s experience, this book adds significant new information about the early years of the oil industry and should be of interest to scholars of business history, the history of the American West, and the history of California and Mexico.
Martin R. Ansell teaches history at Brookhaven
College in Dallas, Texas.
|
Feb 1998
302 pp., Illus. 6 x 9 |
|
| $69.95 cloth 978-0-8142-0749-9 (0-8142-0749-9) | Add cloth to shopping cart |
| Historical Perspectives on Business Enterprise |