Description
This collection contains the records of Vetco Offshore Industries, formerly known as the Ventura Tool Company, founded in
Ventura County in 1930 by Fritz Huntsinger Sr.
Background
Vetco Offshore Industries was founded in 1930 by Fritz Huntsinger Sr. after he purchased the failing Schwab-Lane Tool Company,
an oilfield tool repair shop where he had previously been employed. Shortly thereafter, he renamed it the Ventura Tool Company.
After struggling during the Great Depression, Ventura Tool Co. helped develop the initial core drilling equipment for small
floating drill rigs off the California coast during the 1950s. Ventura Tool Company changed its name to Vetco Offshore Industries,
Inc. in 1963. Carl Huntsinger became president of the company in 1969, replacing his father. Vetco was sold in the 1980s to
Houston-based Combustion Engineering (C-E) and moved away from its original base in the Ventura Oil Field. Throughout its
existence as Ventura Tool Company and Vetco Offshore Industries, it acquired several companies, became a global operation
and produced notable innovations that both insured its success and significantly altered the industry.Fritz Huntsinger Sr., founder and long-term president of Vetco Offshore Industries, was born on June 8, 1899 in Eimeldinger,
Germany. He served in the German army in WWI. After the war, he graduated from Nuremburg University in Diesel Engineering
and immigrated to the United States in 1923 when oil was just becoming a major industry in Ventura County. He was first employed
as a helper at Schwab-Lane Tool Company, eventually becoming general foreman of the company. When the Lane Tool Company experienced
financial difficulty during the Depression, he purchased it for $5,000 at a sheriff's auction in 1930. Shortly after the purchase,
it was renamed the Ventura Tool Company and became the forerunner of Vetco Offshore Industries, which eventually repaired,
designed and sold offshore drilling equipment on a global scale.
Restrictions
Property rights to the physical object belong to the Museum of Ventura County. Literary rights, including copyright, are retained
by the MVC.