Frederick Gilberts King

Frederick Gilberts King (1866–1920)[1] was a mining engineer[2] and a pioneer in California's burgeoning oil, copper and natural gas industries during the late-19th and early 20th centuries. King was considered "one of the best-known oil men in the west" at the time.[2] He was known for founding the Boston Pacific Oil Company (based in San Francisco, California).[3][4][5]

Frederick Gilberts King
Frederick Gilberts King Jr. as a young man, from a picture dated about 1892.
Born(1866-03-12)March 12, 1866
DiedDecember 11, 1920(1920-12-11) (aged 54)
NationalityEnglish
EducationCramlington Colliery (Northumberland, England)
Occupation(s)Mining Engineer, Oil & Mining Entrepreneur
Organization(s)Member of The North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers and The American Institute of Mining Engineers
Known forFounding of the Boston Pacific Oil Company
SpouseHazel Hope Hubbard
Children2

Mines, oil wells & the founding of the Boston Pacific Oil Company

edit

Born March 12, 1866 in Ayelsford, Nova Scotia, Canada to Frederick Gilberts King Sr. and Julia Ann Miller, King studied mining engineering at Cramlington Colliery[6][7] in Northumberland, England (approximately nine miles north of Newcastle). He was elected to The North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers on 8 October 1892.[8]

By 1892-93, Frederick traveled to the United States, settling in San Francisco, California, where, by the late nineteenth into the early twentieth centuries, California had become the largest oil-producing state in the country.[9] Frederick, representing eastern interests, explored and inspected mines in Shasta County, California.[10] He made his first major purchase in November 1899,[3] which consisted of a deed to the Reid Mine, in Star Gulch (Shasta Co., CA).[3] By its terms, "Frederick G. King and C. D. Galvin, a 'mining man' interested in Shasta county properties, secured a six months' option on the mine for $100,000"[3] ($3 million in 2016). Three installments were agreed to for the payment of the purchase price.[3] The Reid mine was owed by E.A. Reid, John Salnave and W.H. Clendenin of San Francisco.[3] BPOC's intention was to put-in drills and other machinery for developing the mine and of constructions a tramway to the Keswick smelter, where the ore would be worked.[3]

In 1904,[11] King facilitated one of his more high-profile mining acquisitions: the purchase of the then-famous Mammoth copper mine,[11][12] located in Kennett, Shasta Co., California. Originally owned by Desda Wallace of San Francisco,[11][12] Wallace's 1/3 share[11][12] (consisting of 900 acres[11]) was sold to King[11][12] and John Fillius[11][12] for $42,000[11] ($1 million in 2016) in 1904. The remaining 2/3s share remained in the hands of R.M. Saeltzer, Joseph Kahny and Tony Jaegel of Redding, California.[12] King, however, retained a bond to work the entire mine.[12] At the same time, the Guggenheims of New York were negotiating for the purchase of the Mammoth mine.[12]

In 1909, King (with John Filius and Fred Grotefend) purchased the largest salt mine on earth located in Death Valley, California.[13]

In 1910, King's Pacific Sunset Oil Company,[14] which he re-named and incorporated the Boston Pacific Oil Company in March 2010[14] (see below), brought a suit before United States circuit court on 23 December[14] for an injunction to restrain Charles W. Gregg of Colorado, U.S. Waugh, W. Newburg, Morris Newberger, F.A. Cromwell, C.M. Webb, Adeline Webb, U.E. Methaver, and several other of Gregg's associates living in California[14] from disposing of 200,000 shares[14] of the oil company's stock, valued at $1[14] a share at the time, which, it was alleged, was secured by the defendants through "trickery and fraud."[14] Gregg and the other defendants held 200,000 shares[14] of the 219,965 shares[14] of the issued capital stock of the Pacific Sunset oil company.[14] It is said that in order to trade off the 200,000 shares of the Pacific Sunset stock for an equal amount in the Boston Pacific company, Gregg and the other defendants, among other things, filled an oil reservoir on the Pacific Sunset oil company's fifty acres of leased land[14] in Kern county, which contained 3,400 barrels of oil,[14] with water so as to make it appear that the reservoir held between 25,000 to 30,000 barrels of oil.[14] When negotiations began, Gregg and his associates asserted there were four wells on the property[14] each of which was producing 70 barrels of oil per day; and that the total liabilities of the Pacific Sunset Oil Company, which it was proposed that BPOC should take over, did not exceed $10,000; that the sump contained between 25,000 and 30,000 barrels of oil and that the company had an option to purchase the leased land for $80,000 ($2 million in 2016).[14] The complaint stated that each of the four wells produced only 17 to 20 barrels of actual oil the day of the investigation when inspected by a representative of Fillius,[14] and that the wells had not been worked for some period previous to the time they were inspected, so that the 70 barrels pumped "the day of" the investigation was actually the accumulation of several days of pumping;[14] that the sump contained only 3,600 barrels of oil, not 25,000-30,000 (the remainder of the fluid in the reserves being water poured in by the defendants);[14] and that the company held no option to purchase the land they had leased for $80,000.[14] The complaint also indicated that the liabilities of the Pacific Sun Oil Company amounted to $23,304.[14] Another charge contained in the complaint was the Gregg said the Pacific Sunset company had an agreement with the Independent Oil Producers' agency whereby the latter agreed to take all the oil the former should sell at $0.55 ($13.50 in 2016) a barrel, whereas no such agreement existed.[4]

Founded as the Pacific Sunset Oil Company[15][16] (charter forfeited in 1911),[16] King, his brother Charles Tupper King, John Fillius, C. W. Gugg, A. B. Dodd, Fred Grotefund and E. D. King, as directors,[15] renamed and formally incorporated the new Boston Pacific Oil Company (BPOC)[4][15] on 12 March 1910[15] in San Francisco, California, with capital stock valued at $1 million[15][17] ($28 million in 2022). Frederick's brother, Charles Tupper King, also served as the company's attorney.[4][15]

In 1913, King became a member of the American Institute of Mining Engineers.[18]

Death

edit

Frederick died from a heart attack[2][19] (cause of death on birth certificate given as "Myocarditis")[19] on a train en route to Berkeley on 11 December 1920.[2][19] He was 54 years old.[19] By the time of his death, he had amassed a fortune worth over $300,000 ($4.6 million in 2022).[20] The following is a news article from the Oakland Tribune describing Frederick's final moments:[2]

"Berkeley Man Dies on Train"[2]

BERKELEY, Dec. 11—Stricken with heart failure as he was returning to his home at 1731 La Loma Avenue, Berkeley, Frederick Gilbert King, president of the Boston Pacific Oil Company, died on a Southern Pacific train today en route from Taft, Kern county, where he had gone on business. King complained of feeling ill as the train neared Byron, Contra Costa county. Dr. E.R. McPheeters of Modesto, a passenger on the train was summoned, but King had passed away before he could aid him. The body was brought to Berkeley where relatives were notified. As president and general manager of the Boston Pacific Oil Company, King was one of the best known oil men in the west. He was a former mining engineer, but of late had devoted himself to the oil industry. For the last six years he had made his home in Berkeley, and previous to that time resided in San Francisco, coming from the east, where he was engaged in mining activities. He was a member of the Family and Olympic clubs in San Francisco. King is survived by a widow, Mrs. Hazel King, and two children, Frederick Gilbert King Jr., aged 5, and Elizabeth Hubbard King, 2. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 o'clock Monday afternoon at local undertaking parlors."[2]

Lawsuit vacated

edit

Four years following Frederick's death, a verdict in favor for Saide E. Pritchard (of Denver, Colorado) against King's wife, Hazel, and the King estate, for $20,458 ($350,000 in 2022), was vacated by Judge F. H. Rudkin in 1924.[20] The original award of $20,458 in favor of Pritchard returned by a jury in the United States district court against King's estate was set aside because, in Judge Rudkin's opinion, said "the verdict was not supported by the evidence."[20] Sadie Pritchard based her suit on $35,000 ($600,000 in 2022) she invested with King, intended for various mining ventures, while living in Denver, Colorado in 1892, and the evidence showed to be the nucleus of a $300,000 fortune ($4.6 million in 2022) King accumulated before his death.[20] Pritchard sued on the ground that King never made a settlement with her, although evidence showed he intended to.[20] She alleged that she was entitled to receive half of all profits which accrued; and profits from the ventures reached the total of about $750,000[21] ($12.8 million in 20122, but she said she only received $14,000[21] ($240,000 in 2022) before Frederick's death in 1920.[21]

Family

edit

Fredrick Gilberts King Jr. (b. 12 March 1866, Nova Scotia, Canada) was the son of Frederick Gilberts King Sr., m. 1 September 1855[22] in Aylesford, Nova Scotia[22] to Julia Ann Miller[22][23][24] (b. 29 April 1832,[24] dau. William Miller, Esq.,[22][23][24][25] Justice of the Peace, Aylesford, Nova Scotia[24][25] and Susannah Caroline Slocombe[23][24][25]). Frederick had one brother, Charles Tupper King (b. 1862;[1] m. Ethel Durant), named after The Right Hon. Sir Charles Tupper, 1st Baronet and 6th Prime Minister of Canada (who was Charles' aunt's stepson, through her marriage to the Rev. Charles Tupper).[26] Frederick also had two sisters: Mary Isabel King (b. 1864,[1] m. Arthur Frederick Lawrance) and Minnie King (b. 1858).[1] On his mother's maternal line, he is third cousin to Capt. Joshua Slocum,[27] the first person to sail solo around the world and author of Sailing Alone Around the World.

Frederick King married Hazel Hope Hubbard on 12 August 1914 in Berkeley, California[28] and had one daughter and one son:

  1. Frederick Gilberts King III (b. 24 June 1915)[2]
  2. Elizabeth Hubbard King (b. 14 January 1917)[2]

Ancestry

edit

Frederick G. King descends from, on his maternal line, Thomas Wiswall (1601–1683) who was an early settler of British America, a prominent early citizen of the Massachusetts Bay Colony and a key figure in the founding of Cambridge Village (now known as the city of Newton, Massachusetts), John Oliver (1616-1646), one of the earliest graduates of Harvard College (1645) and Mayflower passengers William Mullins,[29] John Alden[29] and Priscilla Alden.[29]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d 1881 Canadian census (Wilmot, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Dist. 16, Sub-Dist. A) p. 52
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Berkeley Man Dies on Train". Oakland Tribune. Obituary: 14. 12 Dec 1920 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Shasta Mine Bonded - Reid Property in Star Gulch to be Developed". San Francisco Chronicle. 7 November 1899. p. 4 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ a b c d "$250,000 Involved in Oil Litigation (Boston Pacific Oil Company Sues to Recover 200,000 Shares and Damages". The San Francisco Call. 24 December 1910. p. 11 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ "Buy Interest in Mine". San Francisco Chronicle. 4 June 1904. p. 3 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ Reid, Andrew (1893). Transactions of the Federated Institution of Mining Engineers. Great Britain: Federated Institution of Mining Engineers. pp. xxxiii.
  7. ^ Walton Brown, Martin (1892). Transactions, Volume 3. Vol. 3. The Institution. p. 907.
  8. ^ The Institute (1904). The North of England Institute of Mining and Mechanical Engineers. London & Newcastle-Upon-Thyne: Andrew Reid & Company. pp. lii.
  9. ^ Hopkins, G. R. (1934). "Crude petroleum and petroleum products". Statistical Appendix to Minerals Yearbook 1932-33. US Bureau of Mines: 306–307.
  10. ^ "Personal". Engineering and Mining Journal. 68. University of California: 464. 14 October 1899.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h "Nevada County Mines Change Their Owners". The San Francisco Call. San Francisco, California. 11 June 1904. p. 4 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h "San Franciscans Invest in a Shasta Co. Mine (John Fillius and Fred G. King Purchase a Third Interest in the Famous Mammoth Property". The San Francisco Call. 5 June 1904. p. 22 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. ^ "The Largest Salt Mine on Earth". The Roseville Register. Roseville, California. March 18, 1909.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t "$250,000 Involved in Oil Litigation - Boston Pacific Oil Company Sues to Recover 200,000 Shares and Damages". The San Francisco Call. 24 December 1910. p. 11 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ a b c d e f The Oil Age Weekly. 1. Vol. 1. The University of California. 1910. pp. 3, 11.
  16. ^ a b California Secretary of State (1911). Certified Copy of Compiled Statement of Domestic Corporations Whose Charters Have Been Forfeited, and Foreign Corporations Whose Right to Do Business in this State Has Been Forfeited ... November 30, 1910, for Failure to Pay Their Corporation License Tax: Certified to December 31, 1910. California: W.W. Shannon, superintendent of state printing. p. 15.
  17. ^ "VI". Summary of Operations; Annual Report of the State Oil and Gas Supervisor. Vol. 7. University of California: California. Dept. of Petroleum and Gas, California. Division of Mines and Geology. 1918. p. 377. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  18. ^ "Members, Associates & Junior Member List". American Institute of Mining Engineers (133): 82. 1918.
  19. ^ a b c d Death certificate (Berkeley, California), 11 December 1920
  20. ^ a b c d e "Verdict for $20,458 for Woman Set Aside". The Bakersfield Californian. Bakersfield, California. Associated Press Leased Wire. 26 January 1924. p. 11 – via Newspapers.com.
  21. ^ a b c "Litigation End Asked By Widow". Oakland Tribune. Oakland, California. 12 August 1924. p. 35 – via Newspapers.com.
  22. ^ a b c d Vital Statistics from Halifax Newspapers. 27. Halifax, Nova Scotia: Genealogical Association of Nova Scotia. 2000. p. 54. ISBN 1-895982-24-3.
  23. ^ a b c Evans, Lorna Woodman (1996). The Township Book - Kings County, Nova Scotia (Aylesford, Cornwallis, Horton). 37 Cornwallis Street, Kentville, Nova Scotia: The Family History Committee of the Kings Historical Society. p. 9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  24. ^ a b c d e Eakins, James. The Slocomb Family of Annapolis County, Nova Scotia. p. 15.
  25. ^ a b c Calnek, W.A. (1972). History of the County of Annapolis. Belleville, Ontario, Canada: Mika Studio. p. 602.
  26. ^ Wentworth Hamilton Eaton, Arthur (1910). The History of Kings County, Nova Scotia, Heart of the Acadian Land, Giving a Sketch of the French and Their Expulsion: And a History of the New England Planters who Came in Their Stead, with Many Genealogies, 1604-1910. Kings County, Nova Scotia: Salem Press Company. pp. 847. mary miller rev. charles tupper lockhart.
  27. ^ Slocum, M.D., Ph.D., Charles Elihu (1882). A Short History of the Slocums, Slocumbs and Slocombs of America, Genealogical ad Biographical, Embracing 11 Generations of the First-Named Family from 1637-1881. Syracuse, New York: By the author. pp. 502, 511, 680.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  28. ^ Marriage certificate (Berkeley, California), 12 August 1914
  29. ^ a b c Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants (John Alden-Priscilla Mullins family)