Dabney Oil Syndicate

Dabney Oil Syndicate

The Dabney Oil Syndicate refers to a number of petroleum-drilling enterprises in California involving Joseph B. Dabney and his associates.

Joseph Benjamin Dabney, born 1858 in Madison County, Iowa, was in California at the turn of the 20th century when interest was being awakened in the possibilities of drilling for oil.

In 1900, E. J. (Emmor Jerome) Miley sold his fruit holdings and joined with Dabney in leasing a tract in the McKittrick district in the San Joaquin Valley. Ten oil wells were drilled the first year. In May 1901, the Dabney Oil Company was incorporated with capitalization of $1 million, and the two sold their holdings to the corporation.

California oil wells, 1913

Frank H. Powers, partner in the law firm of Heller & Powers, with offices at Montgomery and Pine in San Francisco, California, became the secretary of Dabney Oil Company, Inc., at 330 Pine Street.

In 1913, Miley again joined with Dabney, drilling for oil under the name of Hildalgo Oil Company on and around the Simi Valley, California ranch owned by the Ventura Land & Water Company, the family firm of Lewis M. Lloyd. At the time, Ralph B. Lloyd, his son, was operating the ranch, and persuaded Dabney and Miley to drill several wells in the area. All of them were dry or failed to sustain production.

Miley sold his interest in Hildago a year later, but continued to work with Dabney for the remainder of Dabney's life, as majority owner of State Consolidated Oil Company.

State Consolidated, formed in March 1911, and capitalized at $1.25 million, did rather well in Kern County, California, and by 1920 was operating 33 producing wells there. Dabney would become one of the most prominent small operators of the Los Angeles basin with the discovery of oil at Signal Hill, California. Between his Dabney Oil corporation and his Joseph B. Dabney and Company partnership, he was operating 17 producing wells by 1920.

Despite their lack of success in Simi Valley, Ralph Lloyd convinced Dabney and Miley to test the ranch lands that lay to the east of the city of Ventura, California. Lloyd had attended the University of California, where his study of geology confirmed his belief that his family's ranch, and those around it, lay atop a vast oil pool. When Lewis Lloyd sold his 4500 acres (18 km²) of pasture that straddled the Ventura River, Lloyd convinced his father to retain the mineral rights. It proved to be a wise decision.

State Consolidated drilled three wells on this property and another on the adjacent Louis Hartman ranch, but drilling crews were unable to cope with the enormous gas pressures that they encountered. Indeed, one well blew out. Dabney and Lloyd decided to bring in a major company with the financial resources and technology to handle the area's difficult geology and steep terrain. In April 1916, they signed a lease with Shell Company of California, a subsidiary of Royal Dutch Shell.

Lloyd convinced the other landowners in the area to lease to Shell, which leased 13000 acres (53 km²) in all. Landowners received a standard 12.5% royalty on leases. Dabney and Lloyd received an overriding royalty.

Meanwhile, Lloyd acquired three other leases, bought one parcel of land outright, and obtained mineral rights to the ranches that lay to the east (and north of the downtown). Shell was not interested in any of them. By 1919, the Lloyd interests had accumulated more than 6000 acres (24 km²) of oil rights and leases on another 6000.

Lloyd thought he had an exclusive right to negotiate leases for Shell; Shell thought otherwise. When they went directly to Southern California Edison to negotiate a lease, Lloyd felt betrayed.

Associated Oil logo, 1932

Subsequently, Lloyd and Dabney turned to Associated Oil, another California major, offering an option in their "as yet unproven" part of the Ventura field. In February 1920, they and State Consolidated gave an option on 1500 acres (6 km²) to Associated Oil for $30,000. Associated gave them an additional $20,000 for materials and labor incurred in redrilling Lloyd No. 3 during the option period.

When Associated took up the option, they paid another $200,000 for a lease that provided a 20% royalty and one-third of the oil produced, plus an additional 30% that started after Associated had recovered the $250,000 it had paid for option and lease, and ended after the 30% gave Dabney-Lloyd and State Consolidated $500,000. After that, Associated only paid a 20% royalty. The Lloyd lease proved to be one of the most lucrative in the field.[1]

The lease also required that Associated drill so-called offset wells, to prevent draining from adjacent leases. This was part of the strategy of Dabney and Lloyd to develop the field in an "orderly" manner. Indeed, both Associated and Shell cooperated in maximizing the long-term output of the field, which to date has produced almost one billion barrels of crude oil.

The breakthrough in production came in January 1925, with the completion of Associated's Lloyd Well No. 9-A. Royalties from production over the next few years made Dabney and Lloyd wealthy men. For instance, Lloyd Well No. 9-A generated $378 000 total production in its first two months alone.

Their success was such that Dabney and Lloyd often were approached by others, who wanted to buy or give leases.

In April 1927, Dabney and several others incorporated the Goleta Oil Dome Company, capitalized at $1 million, for the purpose of exploring the Tecolote district in the Goleta area of south Santa Barbara County, California. Miley, too, searched for oil in this area as well. Indeed, his Miley Oil Company discovered the minor Goleta field in February 1927. Rapid encroachment of water forced Miley and other operators to abandon their wells eighteen months later. Both Dabney and Miley were shut out of the much more lucrative Elwood field, which was discovered in June 1928 near the coast, due south of the Goleta field.

Joseph Dabney died in 1932.[1]

The Chandler connection

Raymond Chandler came to work for the Dabney Oil syndicate in 1922 as a bookkeeper and auditor in their Signal Hill (Los Angeles) office. He rose to office manager and vice-president, but was fired in 1932 for drinking, womanizing, and absenteeism. Because he had testified for them in a trial, two of his friends from the oil business offered him $100/month for living expenses. He spent the next year honing his writing skills, and became a master of pulp fiction, turning the hard-boiled detective novel into an art form.

The college connections

Joseph B. Dabney was a trustee of California Institute of Technology.

Dabney Hall of the Humanities, a gift of Mr. and Mrs. Dabney, is one of the four corner buildings of Caltech's central courtyard. It was built in 1927.

In 1928, the Dabneys gave $200,000 to build Dabney House, one of four new residence halls.

References

  1. ^ Los Angeles Times, Sept. 12, 1932 obituary of Joseph Dabney

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