Details for Big Inch Pipeline

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5183009934

Data

Marker Number 9934
Atlas Number 5183009934
Marker Title Big Inch Pipeline
Index Entry Big Inch Pipeline
Address
City Longview
County Gregg
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 421430
UTM Northing 3832338
Subject Codes World War II; oil/petroleum topics
Marker Year 1990
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Martin Luther King at Pittman St.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Before the United States entry into World War II following the bombing of Pearl Harbor in December 1941, ninety-five percent of the crude oil delivered to East Coast refineries was transported by tanker ships. Ninety percent of that oil originated from Texas oil fields. Beginning in february 1942, many U.S. oil tankers en route from the Gulf of Mexico to the East Coast were sunk by German submarines. Recognizing the need to transport oil under safer circumstances, Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes developed a plan for massive overland oil pipeline. Under the auspices of the War Emergency Pipelines, Inc., construction began on the largest pipeline in history up to that time. Measuring twenty-four inches in diameter, the Big Inch pipeline extended from Longview to Norris City, Illinois, and eventually to refineries in the East. The Big Inch pipeline's impact on the war effort was tremendous, enabling the safe and timely transport of oil products vital to the Allies. During the height of wartime service, over 300,000 barrels of oil were delivered each day over the 1,476-mile line. When the war ended the Big Inch continued in service after conversion to a natural gas pipeline.
ATLAS_NUM=5183009934

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