William Rintoul: the Encyclopedia of California Oil History

The Los Angeles Times once called William Rintoul “one of the West’s most unusual writers.” Oil field journalists are indeed rare and are becoming even rarer. Nevertheless, their contributions are not to be ignored. Petroleum history is a chronicle of the largest industry that has shaped the modern world for the past 150 years or so. Lighting, heating, transportation (on land, on the sea and in the air), rocket propulsion, petrochemicals and medicines are all gifts of this black gold. There have been many authors of the history of the oil and gas industry, but William Rintoul, who died 20 years ago next month, on June 26, 2001, was different. He crystallized in his lifelong work the very history of the oil and gas industry in California. For five untiring decades, he wrote thousands of articles on this subject.

It is impossible to decouple California’s petroleum history from Rintoul’s legacy.

A Kern County Patriot

The third and youngest son of his family, William Thomas Rintoul was born on April 30, 1922 in Taft, Calif. His father, Henry Ward Beecher “Pete” Rintoul, was born in Canada in 1887, but grew up in San Francisco, and graduated in civil engineering from the University of California in Berkeley in 1911. Beecher Rintoul first worked for the Southern Pacific Railroad and then for the Western Water Company (largely associated with oil fields), becoming the company’s general manager in 1940. He married Deane Gertrude O’Connor in 1917 when they both worked for the Southern Pacific Railroad. They raised three sons: Henry Ward Beecher, Jr., John David and William. Both the younger Beecher and John David graduated in mechanical engineering from UC Berkeley. Beecher worked for the Southern Pacific Railroad, and John David for the Standard Oil Company.

The city of Taft (named after U.S. President William Taft) is located in the foothills of the San Joaquin Valley, in Kern County, Calif. Bakersfield, another oil town in Kern County where Rintoul spent most of his life, is only 32 miles east of Taft. This setting in the midst of prolific oil fields had a lifelong pull on Rintoul’s life. While a teenager, Rintoul became interested in boxing and wrote articles on famous boxers for magazines in the United States, Canada and Europe. One of these heavyweight boxers, Max Marek from Chicago, who promoted himself as “The Man Who Beat Joe Louis” after having done so in the Golden Gloves finals in Boston in 1933, was a book lover and sent Rintoul a list of his favorite novels. Consequently, Rintoul became a voracious reader: he read Sinclair Lewis, Upton Sinclair, Zane Grey, John Steinbeck and other renowned novelists. While a senior in high school, Rintoul also worked in oil fields near Taft on some weekends.

When John Steinbeck’s “The Grapes of Wrath” was published in 1939 (the year Rintoul finished high school), the book was banned (and burned) for a while in California, but Rintoul was proud to say that he had already read it. In this novel, Kern County is depicted as the final destination for the Joad family’s arduous migration during the Great Depression. The Joad family represented the plight of many people from Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas who went to the Golden State in search of jobs.

Image Caption

Bill Rintoul and his wife Frankie Jo Rintoul on a tour group that he led through the Taft oil fields in the 1990s. Photo courtesy of Susan Parker Rintoul.

Please log in to read the full article

The Los Angeles Times once called William Rintoul “one of the West’s most unusual writers.” Oil field journalists are indeed rare and are becoming even rarer. Nevertheless, their contributions are not to be ignored. Petroleum history is a chronicle of the largest industry that has shaped the modern world for the past 150 years or so. Lighting, heating, transportation (on land, on the sea and in the air), rocket propulsion, petrochemicals and medicines are all gifts of this black gold. There have been many authors of the history of the oil and gas industry, but William Rintoul, who died 20 years ago next month, on June 26, 2001, was different. He crystallized in his lifelong work the very history of the oil and gas industry in California. For five untiring decades, he wrote thousands of articles on this subject.

It is impossible to decouple California’s petroleum history from Rintoul’s legacy.

A Kern County Patriot

The third and youngest son of his family, William Thomas Rintoul was born on April 30, 1922 in Taft, Calif. His father, Henry Ward Beecher “Pete” Rintoul, was born in Canada in 1887, but grew up in San Francisco, and graduated in civil engineering from the University of California in Berkeley in 1911. Beecher Rintoul first worked for the Southern Pacific Railroad and then for the Western Water Company (largely associated with oil fields), becoming the company’s general manager in 1940. He married Deane Gertrude O’Connor in 1917 when they both worked for the Southern Pacific Railroad. They raised three sons: Henry Ward Beecher, Jr., John David and William. Both the younger Beecher and John David graduated in mechanical engineering from UC Berkeley. Beecher worked for the Southern Pacific Railroad, and John David for the Standard Oil Company.

The city of Taft (named after U.S. President William Taft) is located in the foothills of the San Joaquin Valley, in Kern County, Calif. Bakersfield, another oil town in Kern County where Rintoul spent most of his life, is only 32 miles east of Taft. This setting in the midst of prolific oil fields had a lifelong pull on Rintoul’s life. While a teenager, Rintoul became interested in boxing and wrote articles on famous boxers for magazines in the United States, Canada and Europe. One of these heavyweight boxers, Max Marek from Chicago, who promoted himself as “The Man Who Beat Joe Louis” after having done so in the Golden Gloves finals in Boston in 1933, was a book lover and sent Rintoul a list of his favorite novels. Consequently, Rintoul became a voracious reader: he read Sinclair Lewis, Upton Sinclair, Zane Grey, John Steinbeck and other renowned novelists. While a senior in high school, Rintoul also worked in oil fields near Taft on some weekends.

When John Steinbeck’s “The Grapes of Wrath” was published in 1939 (the year Rintoul finished high school), the book was banned (and burned) for a while in California, but Rintoul was proud to say that he had already read it. In this novel, Kern County is depicted as the final destination for the Joad family’s arduous migration during the Great Depression. The Joad family represented the plight of many people from Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas who went to the Golden State in search of jobs.

In 1940, Rintoul went to UC Berkeley to study journalism. After graduation in 1943, he joined the U.S. Army and served in the 89th Infantry Division in Europe, later earning a Bronze Star. In 1946, Rintoul returned to Taft, then took a year to travel in Mexico and Central America. During Christmas of 1947, he returned again to Taft, where he met Frankie Jo Miller. They married on June 19, 1948. For a while, Rintoul worked as a roustabout for Standard Oil, but his passion lay in writing. Using the G.I. Bill program for the returning World War II veterans, Rintoul returned to school and obtained a master’s in journalism from Stanford in 1949. He soon began working for The Bakersfield Californian as a stringer in Delano, Calif., where his daughter Susan was born. Rintoul’s early assignments were to report on anything making news – fires, crimes, weddings, etc. But when the Californian decided to launch an oil column, Rintoul was picked as their writer.

In 1950, Rintoul moved his family to Bakersfield where their son James was born a year later. Based in his home office on 2721 Beech Street, Rintoul continued his freelance writing for the Californian and numerous other periodicals for the rest of his life.

Rintoul was proud to be from Taft and Kern County. He was Taft’s Oildorado Grand Marshal in 1980. (In 2020, Taft’s 10-day party and parade, Oildorado, celebrated the 110th anniversary of the city.) James Houston, author of “Californians: Searching for the Golden State,” in which Rintoul was featured, called Rintoul “a Kern County patriot” and “a living encyclopedia of petroleum lore.” During the second oil shock of 1979-80, Rintoul was proud to say that Kern County was the fourth largest oilproducing area in the United States.

Chronicles of California’s Oil

Rintoul was a six-day-a-week “Oilfields” columnist for The Bakersfield Californian; he wrote this popular column for 51 years, from 1949 until his retirement in May 2000. For more than a decade, Rintoul was also a regular contributor to The Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, The Sacramento Bee, the Tulsa World and Pacific Oil World, and often wrote for magazines such as Petroleum Week, Drilling Contractor, Well Servicing Magazine, Oil & Gas Investor, Oil & Gas Journal, Offshore Magazine, Westways, California Business, California Crossroads, Sports Illustrated, Popular Mechanics, Nation, and so forth.

From 1976-81, Rintoul published three illustrated books that are indispensable to any student of California’s oil history: “Spudding In: Recollection of Pioneer Days in the California Oil Fields,” published by the California Historical Society in 1976; “Oildorado: Boom Times on the West Side,” published by Western Tanager Press in 1979; and “Drilling Ahead: Tapping California’s Richest Oil Fields,” published by Western Tanager Press in 1981. Reading through these and his other writings, one finds a continuous thread in his craft: oil is humanized. Rather than simply writing about rigs, drill bits and gushers in a dull and dry language, Rintoul focused on people – their lives, dreams, struggles, pains and joy. For instance, after narrating the 1899 discovery of the Kern River oil field in California, Rintoul concludes with this line from “Spudding In”: “Hundreds of men came from all over the West to see the Elwood discovery well. At one time a picture was taken of two hundred men in the lobby of Bakersfield’s Southern Hotel. An agent for the Southern Pacific bought oil from the Elwoods for use in the line’s locomotives.”

This humanization of the oil industry is also evident in the photographs Rintoul included in his books. The vast majority are pictures of ordinary men walking or working in oil fields. Rintoul often described oilfield work as hard, dirty and dangerous, and appreciated the work of these men.

Rintoul also captured the dynamics of life in oil towns and oil fields of California in short stories published in more than a dozen magazines. Some of these were collected in two books: “Rig Nine” and “Roustabout,” published respectively in 1983 and 1986 by a small press, Seven Buffaloes, in Montana. Two of the stories in “Roustabout” were translated into Russian and included in an anthology of American writers entitled, “I Believe in Humanity,” published in Moscow in 1986. The book’s Russian editor noted that Steinbeck would have written like Rintoul, had he written about oil fields. In 2011, 10 years after Rintoul’s death, his children, Susan and James, published “The Collected Stories of William Rintoul” in a hardcover volume; it contains 45 short stories.

Rintoul’s last book was a “big history.” He was commissioned to write the history of California’s Division of Oil and Gas for its 75th anniversary. Rintoul used it as an opportunity to write a succinct chronicle of California’s oil. The result was “Drilling Through Time,” a profusely illustrated “coffee-table” book published in 1990. Rintoul ends his book with the hope that many of the wells “would still be making contributions to California’s oil production on into the next century.” Now in that next century, the petroleum industry is facing many economic, environmental, and technological challenges, and historical perspectives like the one Rintoul documented will offer some aid with these challenges.

Although Rintoul largely focused on Kern Country’s oil industry, his freelance journalism took him to many other places both in the United States, such as Colorado, New Mexico, Texas, the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska, and overseas, such as Scotland and Saudi Arabia, among others.

Rintoul was also a sought-after speaker, and he gave more than 150 speeches. As for the topics, “the standing family joke,” recalls his daughter Susan, “was that his topic was always: ‘the changing oil scene.’” She also remembers her father in these words: “We never went out to dinner without people in the oil industry buttonholing my dad to ask about what was happening in the oil fields. He always knew.”

Irreplaceable Legacy

In an interview with the renowned writer Gerald Haslam (also from Kern County), Rintoul expressed his feelings about his profession as freelance journalist: “The advantage of working as I have worked is, I’m my own boss. The disadvantage is a total lack of security.” Nonetheless, he worked hard, made a successful career, and supported his family – a life lesson to the members of any generation who may be thinking that life is hard only to them.

Aside from journalism, Rintoul also taught classes in writing at Fresno State University and Bakersfield Junior College. He was an active and a lifetime member of the Kern Press Club, the Petroleum Club of Taft, the San Joaquin Chapter of the American Petroleum Institute and the Petroleum Production Pioneers. For his contributions to petroleum journalism and historiography, Rintoul received a number of awards, including the Pacific Section AAPG Journalism Award in 1986, the Oil Baron Award from the American Petroleum Institute’s San Joaquin Valley Chapter in 1989, AAPG’s Journalism Award in 1990 (presented to him during AAPG’s annual convention in San Francisco), the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Independent Oil Producers’ Agency in Bakersfield in 1995 and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the California Independent Petroleum Association in 1996.

Rintoul died in 2001 at age 79, after a year and a half-long battle with Alzheimer’s disease. Newspapers in California, including The Los Angeles Times, Bakersfield Californian and Daily Midway Driller, all published his obituary. Many “letters to the editor” from readers, well-wishers and colleagues honored his life and contributions. One person remarked that Bill Rintoul was irreplaceable. Indeed, since his death, no journalist has filled his shoes. Rintoul is a Kern County and California legend.

Acknowledgements: I express my gratitude to Susan Parker Rintoul and James Rintoul for sharing their time and information sources and documents on the life and career of their beloved father.

You may also be interested in ...