Understanding the Fossil Fuel Industry’s Legacy of White Supremacy

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Oil workers
Oil field workers adding a length of pipe to drill stream in Kilgore, Texas, in the 1930s. Credit: Russell Lee for U.S. Farm Security Administration, public domain

In December, The New York Times published a story revealing how ExxonMobil and other oil companies had paid a public relations firm named FTI to build โ€œnewsโ€ and information websites falsely suggesting grassroots support for the fossil fuel industry and its initiatives. ExxonMobil, which didnโ€™t speak with Times reporter (and my former coworker) Hiroko Tabuchi for the story, responded by trying to smear the messenger. โ€œWe refused to work with the author,โ€ ExxonMobil tweeted, โ€œbecause of her obvious bias against the oil and gas industry.โ€

The firm was alluding to an October tweet by Tabuchi that sheโ€™d โ€œbeen thinking a lot about fossil fuels and white supremacy recently,โ€ noting that nearly every oil industry official sheโ€™d encountered as a reporter was white and male. ExxonMobil complained the tweet was a โ€œbaseless claim alleging industry links to white supremacy,โ€ and Tabuchi later deleted it. But according to University of Notre Dame historian Darren Dochuk, Tabuchiโ€™s tweet reflected somethingย real.

โ€œIn researching the history of oil in modern America since the 1860s to the present, oil was I think unquestionably the most racially homogenous industry in America. And, there are clear racist patterns of organization within the industry from the very beginning,โ€ says Dochuk, author of Anointed with Oil: How Christianity and Crude Made Modern America.

White supremacy can be narrowly defined as a system of overtly racist individuals who seek to oppress or eliminate anyone who is not white, and more broadly as a system designed to protect and elevate whiteness. This latter definition shifts the focus from a few explicitly racist individuals to the underlying system of norms that give white people a disproportionate advantage. A banal example is when a nightclub establishes a โ€œNo Timbsโ€ policy, referring to the brand of work boots long fashionable in Black hip-hop culture, to exclude young Black male patrons.

These norms can also oppress Black people and elevate white people in more enduring ways. People with โ€œBlackโ€ names get fewer calls for job interviews compared to similarly qualified white people. Homes with a Black owner are typically appraised at lower values than those whose owners are perceived to be white. 

Whichever definition you choose, says Dochuk, the historical record reveals clear links between white supremacy and the oil industry. According to his research, when crude oil was discovered in the hills of northwestern Pennsylvania just prior to the Civil War, it was seen โ€œas a mystical fount that might ease America out of bloodshed and into a new age of peace and prosperity. Oil was to be a healing balm for the bodyย politic.โ€

A game of cards at the oil workers’ union headquarters in Seminole, Oklahoma, in the 1930s. Credit: Russell Lee for U.S. Farm Security Administration, public domain

But this healing balm was intended for โ€œwhites only,โ€ and that wasnโ€™t just because in that era few Black people lived in the communities where oil was first extracted. As the industry shifted west and south at the turn of the 20th century, to Texas, California, and Mexico, it collided with the emergence of the โ€œLost Causeโ€ mythos across the South, a set of pseudo-historical justifications for slavery as a just system in which the enslaved were happy, and the Civil War was a heroic insurrection to protect the Southโ€™s โ€œeconomic prosperityโ€ from โ€œNorthern aggression.โ€ The Lost Cause lie erases from history the reasons that abolitionists like Harriet Tubman, Denmark Vessey, and Nat Turner fought for Black liberation.

White oilmen (they were almost all men) saw oil as a resource that could help the South rebuild, while also re-installing a system that ensured Black people would remain structurally at the bottom of their racial hierarchy. So they codified segregation into the oil fields. โ€œThe oil industry circa 1901 [and] going forward is very much implanted in regions of Texas and Oklahoma that are typically places where lower-class whites have been fighting and clawing for privilege on the racial ladder,โ€ says Dochuk โ€œfighting against, as they see it, rising Black southerners who want also a place on the economic peckingย order.โ€

One way the industry accomplished this in the South was by limiting the types of work available to people of color. By the early 20th century, white oilmen had firmly established a pattern of keeping the most lucrative roles in the oil business for themselves, says Dochuk, while relegating the most difficult and least profitable to Black and Mexican American workers, such as drilling pipe and laying pipelines that could weigh upwards of 600 pounds through mosquito-infestedย swamps.

Oil field worker housing in Hobbs, New Mexico, around 1940. Credit: Russell Lee for U.S. Farm Security Administration, public domain

The oil industry also segregated its employees in other ways. Black workers typically lived in tents, compared to sturdier lodging for white workers. Black workers were left to feed themselves, often turning to hunting, despite earning a fraction of the pay of white workers who were fed on the company dime.

Oil towns were also scenes of brutal attacks by whites against Blacks, according to Dochuk. โ€œTraditionally, this is where a lot of the most violent lynching has gone on,โ€ he says. Texas was so violent that Black oil workers who managed to eke out enough money sometimes sought safer pastures in Oklahoma. But that was no guarantee of safety.ย  The story of the 1921 Tulsa Riots, in which white rioters killed 36 Black people in Tulsa, Oklahoma and obliterated the city’s prosperous Greenwood district (known as โ€œBlack Wall Streetโ€), gained new public attention in 2019 when it was featured in the opening episode of HBOโ€™s โ€œWatchmen.โ€ But the fact that Tulsa was an oil town, then nicknamed the โ€œOil Capital of the World,โ€ is less remarkedย upon.

This kind of racist violence was common among oil towns. The Tulsa massacre was just unique in the scale of the destruction.

ExxonMobil has roots in this era, going all the way back to the 1911 founding of the Humble Oil & Refining Company in Humble, Texas. Humble Oil was soon acquired by Standard Oil of New Jersey, which in 1972 became the Exxon Corporation, which merged with Mobil (formerly the Standard Oil Company of New York) in 1999.

Oil field workers eating lunch on site in Kilgore, Texas, in the 1930s. Credit: Russell Lee for U.S. Farm Security Administration, public domain

Even as the oil business went all in on Jim Crow, Black workers began to carve out spaces for themselves in the lumber and shipping industries. By 1910, Black laborers made up 59.1 percent of the timber workforce in Louisiana, and 38 percent in Texas. But as late as 1940, Black oil workers only accounted for 0.05 percent of all employees in oil production, and 3 percent of refinery workers.

American oilmen also exported this bigotry. During early-20th-century oil exploration in Mexico, U.S. firms relegated Black and Chicano workers to โ€œthe hot, dirty, and unskilled jobs: clearing land, doing laundry, cooking and washing, cleaning buildings, and carrying equipment,โ€ according to Jonathan Brownโ€™s book Oil and Revolution in Mexico. In the 1930s, Texaco chief executive Torkild Rieber was a Nazi sympathizer whose company would go on to literally fuel Hitler’s regime. In Saudi Arabia, Standard Oil Company of California (now part of BP) created โ€œa system of privilege and inequality, which we know as Jim Crow in the United States, as Apartheid in South Africa, and as racism more generally,โ€ writes University of Pennsylvania political scientist Robert Vitalis in America’s Kingdom: Mythmaking on the Saudi Oil Frontier, and brought the system with it to Latin America and Indonesia as well. In Libya, Esso (another ExxonMobil precursor) created a โ€œsettler communityโ€ based on architectural separation between Libyans and white American, British, and Canadian employees.

The U.S. Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s, along with the decolonization movements across Asia and Africa, sought to upend some of these racist hierarchies. But the oil industryโ€™s white supremacy remained entrenched. As reported recently in Drilled News, in 1994 financial analyst Bari-Ellen Roberts and five colleagues filed a class action suit against Texaco (now Chevron) after she was passed over for a promotion, and then asked to train the white man who got the job. In 1996, Richard A. Lundwall, a dismissed Texaco executive, turned over recordings of senior Texaco officials discussing the lawsuit to the plaintiffsโ€™ lawyers in which they considered destroying incriminating evidence related to the suit. They referred to Black employees as the โ€œN-wordโ€ and โ€œBlack jelly beans,โ€ helping make Robertsโ€™ case.

Civil rights march in Washington, D.C. in 1963. Credit: Warren K. Leffler, U.S. News & World Report Magazine Photograph Collection

After winning a $176 million settlement โ€” the largest to date in a corporate discrimination lawsuit โ€” Roberts wrote a book chronicling the racism she had encountered at Texaco. In one incident, a white employee poked his head into Robertsโ€™ office and exclaimed, โ€œWell, Jesus Christ, I never thought I’d live to see the day when a Black woman had an office at Texaco.โ€ In another, Roberts discovered her performance grade was lowered because a manager considered her โ€œuppity,โ€ a racist dog whistle suggesting that a Black person was moving beyond their โ€œstation.โ€ Roberts also learned that behind her back, one of her bosses had referred to her as a โ€œlittle colored girl.โ€

This kind of bigotry isn’t relegated to the last century. Just four years ago, NPR reported on discrimination in oil fields. One former Black employee who spoke to reporter Jeff Brady described finding phrases like โ€œn***** go homeโ€ scribbled onto a pipe, and nooses being left for him and other Black workers to find. Late last year, a class action lawsuit was filed against Pipeliners Local Union 798, a major pipeline workers trade union of more than 8,000 members, alleging that the union refused to employ Black workers (and white women) through the 1980s. The suit contends that even today Black workers are consistently hired for less well-regarded and more poorly paid โ€œhelperโ€ roles, but passed over in favor of less qualified white employees for the better-paid โ€œjourneymanโ€ roles. Everything old, it seems, is indeed new again.

The links between the oil industry and white supremacy extend beyond the corporate office and the drill pad. Refineries and other industrial sites are deliberately and disproportionately sited in or near communities of color. Race can predict which communities will and wonโ€™t get cleaned up after an oil spill. One could argue that white supremacy within the oil industry is so much the norm, that it is easier to point to the exceptions.

When firms like ExxonMobil make accusations of bias against those who, like The Timesโ€™ Hiroko Tabuchi, point out the historic links between the oil industry and white supremacy, they are trying to rewrite more than a century of well-documented racism into a rosier history. โ€œThey’re coming out of certain assumptions of racial privilege, which they might not even be able to articulate,โ€ says Douchak. But learning from previous generations frees us to make new advances and avoid catastrophic pitfalls.

As James Baldwin, the acclaimed activist and writer, once wrote, โ€œwe are trapped in history.โ€ The present is built upon the past, and will be constrained by it until we face up to these devastating truths. Will the oil industry embrace that reckoning? โ€œI think there’s been an effort lately to improve on that,โ€ Douchak says, โ€œbut that, that is a legacy. And it’s not just a legacy, but it’s something that needs to be confronted.โ€

CORRECTION (3/31/21): The original version of this article stated that Black laborers made up 59.1 percent of the workforce in Louisiana in 1910. That has beenย corrected.

CORRECTION (4/14/22): The original version misspelled the surname of Darren Dochuk. That has been corrected.

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Kendra Pierre-Louis is a climate reporter. She currently works for Gimlet, the podcasting company. Previously she was a climate reporter with The New York Times, a staff writer for Popular Science (PopSci) where she wrote about science, the environment, and, occasionally, mayonnaise.

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