Industry | petroleum refining and distribution |
---|---|
Predecessor | Superior Refining Company |
Founded | 1909 |
Defunct | October 1953 |
Fate | Sold to APCO |
Successor | Anderson-Prichard Oil Corporation |
Headquarters | , United States |
Area served | Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Missouri |
The Kanotex Refining Company ( reporting mark: KOTX), a regional oil refinery and gasoline distributor, began operation in Caney, Kansas, in 1909, [1] a successor to the Superior Refining Company. The company's logo was a Kansas sunflower behind a five-point star; [2] the Kan-O-Tex name referred to Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas as the states in which the company originally marketed its products.
John McEwen Ames became the company's president in 1915 [3] and established a main refinery in Arkansas City, Kansas, in 1917 [4] which would become the base of the company's operations. While the initial market was Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, Meyer Brothers Gas Station & General Store in Orchard Farm, Missouri, sold Kan-O-Tex fuel in the late 1920s; by 1930, Kan-O-Tex products were advertised locally in St. Joseph, Missouri, by the Home Oil and Gas Corporation, a chain of nineteen filling stations. [5]
The Kan-O-Tex brand and reporting mark were acquired by the now-defunct Anderson-Prichard Oil Corporation of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, in October 1953 and are no longer in use.
One Kan-O-Tex Service Station, the former Little's Service Station on U.S. Route 66 in Galena, Kansas, was restored in 2007 as a diner and souvenir shop as part of wider efforts to rebuild and market the historic U.S. Route 66 as a tourism destination. [6]
Industry | petroleum refining and distribution |
---|---|
Predecessor | Superior Refining Company |
Founded | 1909 |
Defunct | October 1953 |
Fate | Sold to APCO |
Successor | Anderson-Prichard Oil Corporation |
Headquarters | , United States |
Area served | Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Missouri |
The Kanotex Refining Company ( reporting mark: KOTX), a regional oil refinery and gasoline distributor, began operation in Caney, Kansas, in 1909, [1] a successor to the Superior Refining Company. The company's logo was a Kansas sunflower behind a five-point star; [2] the Kan-O-Tex name referred to Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas as the states in which the company originally marketed its products.
John McEwen Ames became the company's president in 1915 [3] and established a main refinery in Arkansas City, Kansas, in 1917 [4] which would become the base of the company's operations. While the initial market was Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, Meyer Brothers Gas Station & General Store in Orchard Farm, Missouri, sold Kan-O-Tex fuel in the late 1920s; by 1930, Kan-O-Tex products were advertised locally in St. Joseph, Missouri, by the Home Oil and Gas Corporation, a chain of nineteen filling stations. [5]
The Kan-O-Tex brand and reporting mark were acquired by the now-defunct Anderson-Prichard Oil Corporation of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, in October 1953 and are no longer in use.
One Kan-O-Tex Service Station, the former Little's Service Station on U.S. Route 66 in Galena, Kansas, was restored in 2007 as a diner and souvenir shop as part of wider efforts to rebuild and market the historic U.S. Route 66 as a tourism destination. [6]