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The Rural Voice, 2002-08, Page 37WHEN FIELDS GREW OIL RIGS When Lambton County farmers discovered gum beds' on their farms the world's first oil boom was created Story and photos by Larry Drew While farm fields of Southern Ontario produce only a small fraction of our province's oil requirements today, these fields have a certain significance beyond all others world wide — this is where it all began. In the 1800s, Oil Springs and nearby Petrolia supplied over 90 per cent of Canada's oil requirements. Recognized today as Ontario's Oil Heritage District, it is from here that "farmers became oil prospectors" and from where some of our ancestors set out to "teach the world how to drill and refine oil". While the petroleum industry estimates that some 50,000 wells have been drilled in Ontario, we can still visit North America's very first commercial oil well located down a side road in Lambton County. This side road, appropriately named Gum Bed Line, is home to the Oil Museum of Canada,ja National Historic Site. In addition to the indoor and outdoor displays of early rigs and equipment, you can also see areas of surface tar, called gum beds, where it all began. In a swampy area near Oil Springs, Charles and Henry Tripp formed the world's first oil firm, distilling the gummy substance to make asphalt, paint, and resins as early as 1853. At the time only about 37 settlers inhabited the township, but world acclaim began in 1855 when the Tripps' achievements were recognized at the Universal Exhibition in Paris. Then, James Miller Williams acquired the property and dug into the tar pits to find their source. At a mere depth of 14 feet he struck oil, and with the increasing scarcity of whale oil and thanks to the recent invention of the kerosene lamp, he was able to almost immediately figure out how to refine it in kettles to make lamp oil — thus creating the first commercially viable oil well and refinery in 1858. This was a full year before the first wells in Pennsylvania — and before oil fever ever struck Texas or Alberta. The Oil Springs boom began in earnest, boasting some 400 wells, each producing from 50 to 800 barrels per day, by 1861. Meanwhile, horse-drawn tankers could only haul two barrels at a time out of the bush and swamp. At first, wells were dug by hand. As wells went deeper, or into bedrock, the early prospectors began using "spring pole rigs" (see photo) – a "teeter-totter" arrangement of sorts, using an ash log, suspended over a fulcrum, with a heavy drill bit suspended from one end of the log and men on treadles at the other end to jerk the bit up and down. This innovation allowed a near bankrupt, but persistent, Hugh Dixon Shaw to drill to a depth of 157 feet where he hit the world's first oil gusher 34 THE RURAL VOICE An early "spring pole rig" at the Oil Museum of Canada. A jerker-line system can still be seen in operation on the Oil Heritage Tour.