by Bruce Wells | Mar 1, 2026 | Petroleum Products
Crosley Radio Company’s kerosene-heated refrigeration appliance for rural America.
Only three percent of U.S. farms had electricity in 1925, according to the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C.
For most of rural America in the early 20th century, kerosene lamps extended the day. On some farms, battery-powered radios brought news and entertainment at night. In 1927, Crosley Radio Company reported sales of $18 million — making it the largest radio manufacturer in the world. The company marketing its radios with the slogan, “You’re There With A Crosley.” (more…)
by Bruce Wells | Jan 14, 2026 | Petroleum Products
“New Perfection” kerosene stoves once competed with coal and wood-burning stoves in rural kitchens.
In the early 1900s, a foundry in Cleveland, Ohio, began manufacturing and selling an alternative to coal or wood-burning cast iron stoves. Thanks to a marketing partnership with Standard Oil Company, millions of rural kitchens would cook with kerosene-burning stoves.
America’s energy future changed after 1859 when a new “coal oil” (kerosene) was refined from petroleum purposefully extracted from wells drilled near Oil Creek, Pennsylvania.

A Cleveland foundry president in 1901 approached John D. Rockefeller about a new, kerosene-fueled alternative to cast iron home stoves like this one.
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