1959 S&H gas station

July 30, 2008 – 8:00 am

s-and-h-gas-station.jpg

July 16, 1959

Set the wayback machine to the Eisenhower era.

Currently this is the record holder for oldest image from our files. Tribune librarian Sharon Morem found this print in the bottom of a manila file folder. It went with a four paragraph business brief.

You can see the penciled crop marks a copy editor used to tell the camera room how to shoot the halftone. If the previous sentence makes no sense to you don’t worry. I don’t understand why anyone would want a face on their book or why it takes a computer to create my space.

The S&H gasoline company opened its 21st station in the chain at 1371 Monterey St. This is the same station under another name four years later seen from the railroad bridge in another Vault blog post. The price had dropped a penny in 1963.

Regular gas was priced at 32.9 cents, splurge on ethyl (premium) for 34.9 cents. You also might want to stock up those $2.10 cartons of cigarettes. In the era before electronic tellers, a place that could cash your paycheck on the weekend could be a welcome sight.

There was more price competition between the major and independent fuel vendors back in the day.

There were also fewer world consumers then with China, India and Eastern Europe much less able to afford oil.

Soon we will buy all our fuel from one company, and we will be happy. All bow and open your charge cards to Unoxxonacobilron.

Local station owners tell me that over the years the oil companies have kept margins on gas much the same and the only way they hang on is with mini-markets and car washes.

My guess is the station offered S&H Green stamps too. Fill that book up and win a prize.

  1. 4 Responses to “1959 S&H gas station”

  2. It cracks me up that gas would actually DROP in price from 1959 to 1963.

    You’d never see that happen today. In fact, prices for everything from milk to matches tend to go up up up.

    By Gas Hawg on Jul 30, 2008

  3. It’s interesting that the S&H gas station on the SW corner of Monterey and Pepper streets (just below the railroad overpass) wasn’t listed in the 1956 phone book. Gasoline was about 19 cents in the early fifties. Are you sure this photo wasn’t taken in the 1960s? More interesting is that High test “leaded” Ethyl was only 2-cents more.

    I guess editors didn’t have erasable ‘grease’ pencils to mark photos in those days.

    By SLOnative on Aug 3, 2008

  4. I saw the print version of the blog in Sunday’s Tribune (we are visiting house sitters for a week from Redding). The mention that this was found at the bottom of a drawer and is the oldest from your files was of interest as I recently retired from the Redding Record Searchlight and we used to be sister papers when the Tribune was part of Scripps. I was part of the photo department at one stage, and remember how chaotic our files were; nothing ever got returned to where it was. I currently still have a blog at blogs.redding.com called Life without Clots.

    By Larry Watters on Aug 4, 2008

  5. Thanks for the comments, everyone, while I was on vacation. To answer the question, the photo was attached to a clipping marked July 15, 1959 in an old folder of business stories. This story seems to be the brief announcing the opening of the business.

    By David Middlecamp on Aug 8, 2008

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