Description
A collection of
photographs and maps compiled by American
geologist and petroleum engineer Ralph Arnold (1875-1961), documenting his
pioneering work in oil and mineral exploration, chiefly in the Western United
States, Mexico and Venezuela, from 1900 to 1954, with the bulk of materials from
1905-1935.
Background
American geologist and petroleum engineer Ralph Arnold (1875-1961) was born in
Marshalltown, Iowa, on April 14, 1875. His father, Delos Arnold (1830-1909), was a
lawyer and Iowa state senator who became interested in the study of fossils after
the discovery of crinoids fossils in LeGrand, Iowa. The Arnolds moved to Pasadena,
California in 1886, and Ralph attended Pasadena High School and Throop Polytechnic
School (now the California Institute of Technology) before receiving a B.A. in
geology and mining from Stanford University in 1899. He also completed an M.A.
(1900) and Ph.D. (1902) in geology and paleontology at Stanford. In 1899, Arnold
married Frankie Winninette Stokes, the daughter of Frank and Oraletta Stokes, who
had settled in South Pasadena in the 1880s. Ralph and Winninette Arnold had two
daughters, Winninette (Noyes) and Elizabeth "Betty" (McKee), and they lived in a
house at 1205 Wilson Avenue, South Pasadena (later San Marino).Arnold worked
for the United States Geological Survey (USGS) from 1900 to 1909, and from 1903-1909
published a variety of paleontological articles. He was active in petroleum surveys
throughout the United States, and organized the Petroleum Branch of the U.S. Bureau
of Mines. In 1910, he left the USGS and spent 1911-1916 leading a team in a landmark
survey of petroleum resources in Trinidad and Venezuela, about which he published
The First Big Oil Hunt: Venezuela, 1911-1916
(1960). After his successful South American explorations, Arnold
conducted independent petroleum and mineral explorations from Canada to Mexico,
including valuable surveys in Alaska, Arizona, California, Oklahoma, Oregon,
Montana, Texas and Washington. In the 1920s Arnold’s interests turned to
politics, and he was active in the Herbert Hoover presidential campaign. He remained
committed to the California Academy of Sciences, the Cooper Ornithological Society,
and the Sierra Club, among other organizations. Arnold died in Santa Barbara,
California, in 1961.
Extent
Approximately 16,000
photographs in 97 boxes: 64
photograph albums, lantern
slides, glass and film negatives + 346 rolled maps.
Restrictions
The Huntington Library does not require that researchers request permission to
quote from or publish images of this material, nor does it charge fees for such
activities. The responsibility for identifying the copyright holder, if there is
one, and obtaining necessary permissions rests with the researcher.