ABSTRACT

Lubricants have been used by mankind from the very early days of civilization to assist in reducing the energy needed to slide one object against another. The first lubricants were animal fats, and much later whale oil was used. It was not until crude oil was discovered in commercial quantities in Oil Springs, Ontario, Canada, in 1858 and in Titusville, Pennsylvania, in the United States in 1859 that the concept of petroleum-based lubricants could be seriously considered on a large scale. The first petroleum refinery to produce base stocks (the petroleum distillates fractions used in lubricants) in the Western Hemisphere was built by Samuel Weir in Pittsburgh in the 1850s. One of the earliest lubricant producers (to reduce “waste” production) was the Standard Works in Cleveland, Ohio, owned in part by John D. Rockefeller, whose company subsequently became Standard Oil.