RI 2177 The Petroleum Experiment Station of the Federal Bureau of Mines at Bartlesville, Oklahoma

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 414 KB
- Publication Date:
- Oct 1, 1920
Abstract
A few years ago, (March 3, 1915) Congress passed a law providing for the establishments of ten mining experiment stations under the supervision of the Bureau of Mines. In 1917 the Secretary of the Interior decided that one of these stations should be devoted to Petroleum, and in the early part of 1918, approved the establishment of the Petroleum Experiment Station at Bartlesville, Oklahoma, upon the condition that the city furnish the site for the buildings and guarantee $50,000. for the erection of the buildings. A building site of 5 acres and the necessary building fund was furnished by the Bartlesville Chamber of Commerce.The buildings consist of an administration and laboratory building, both of brick construction. The former is a two-story structure of eight rooms. A large room occupying over half of the main floor is devoted to the library, reception room, and clerical force. The remaining rooms comprise a drafting room and six offices occupied by the staff assigned to this station. The laboratory is a one-story brick building and contains a well-equipped chemical and physical laboratory, also a machine shop and mechanical laboratory. In addition to the main buildings there now are on the property an experimental refinery, a blue-print house, and a store house. These latter buildings are all of sheet-iron construction.
Citation
APA:
(1920) RI 2177 The Petroleum Experiment Station of the Federal Bureau of Mines at Bartlesville, OklahomaMLA: RI 2177 The Petroleum Experiment Station of the Federal Bureau of Mines at Bartlesville, Oklahoma. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1920.