biography
| name: |
Drake, Edwin L(aurentine)
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| sex:
| male
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| lived:
| (1819–80)
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| biography:
| Oilman, born in Greenville, New York, USA. He worked at a succession of jobs in the Midwest and East after leaving the family farm at age 19, becoming a conductor for the New York & New Haven Railroad (1850–7). In the late 1850s he bought some stock in George Bissell's Pennsylvania Rock Oil Co, and in 1857 (taking advantage of his conductor's job to travel free) he travelled to see the land near Oil Creek (Titusville), PA, where surface oil was being collected. Having observed the drilling of artesian wells in New York and Pennsylvania, he shared Bissell's idea of borrowing from that technology to drill for oil in Titusville. The Seneca Oil Co was formed with ‘Colonel’ Drake as president. He secured a lease and began experimenting (1858), striking oil at 69 feet on 27 August 1859 - effectively the first true oil well. He neglected to patent his drilling invention, a pipe liner for the drill hole, and proved to be a poor businessman, losing all his savings to oil speculation in New York City (1863). He drifted for several years, then moved back to Pennsylvania (1870), ill and impoverished. The citizens of Titusville collected some money for him, and he was voted an annuity by the state legislature in 1876. |
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