Newspaper West Virginia Daily Oil Review (Sistersville, W. Va.) 1894-1902
About West Virginia Daily Oil Review (Sistersville, W. Va.) 1894-1902
In 1888, Sistersville was a small West Virginia community nestled along the Ohio River in Tyler County. Yet within a decade, the discovery of oil in the region transformed Sistersville from a town of six hundred into a bustling, industrial boomtown of nearly seven thousand. As the population swelled, local newspapers likewise scrambled to accommodate the shifting demographics of their local patrons.
Prior to the oil boom, the major paper in the region was the Tyler Democrat, founded by brothers John and George McCoy. As the editors themselves noted in 1902 Daily Oil Review supplement entitled Sistersville, West Virginia, they possessed “no experience in the business, no money and but little patronage” at the onset. Through sheer determination, the brothers “hung on like grim death” and kept their humble paper afloat. The sudden arrival of the oil industry and a growing local population, however, boded well for the brothers, and in 1895 they launched a new daily newspaper, the West Virginia Daily Oil Review. John McCoy oversaw the paper and its various iterations over the next decade, capitalizing on the oil industry to sustain and grow his printing enterprise.
As its name suggests, the West Virginia Daily Oil Review catered especially to patrons within the oil industry. The rise and fall of oil prices, the oil well and drilling news, prospects for new fields, and more kept readers abreast of the latest industry news. The paper also offered the usual slate of local and national news, international affairs (including coverage of the Spanish-American War), community gossip, and a bevy of advertisements from local merchants. Corresponding to Sistersville’s growing population, the newspaper likewise developed in size, expanding from four to eight pages and employing two dozen men and women in its Sistersville offices. The Review also boasted a state of the art printing press, which they proudly declared “the fastest press in the world.” Multiple iterations of the paper soon appeared, including concurrent weekly versions labeled the Sistersville Oil Review and Weekly Oil Review. In 1902, the West Virginia Oil Review was renamed the Sistersville Daily Oil Review.
Although the Review‘s expansion, multiple iterations, and busy offices suggested a good measure of success, the paper’s fate was indelibly linked to the Sistersville oil industry, and the oil boom receded nearly as quickly as it began. By the mid-1900s and 1910s, the oil industry subsided, Sistersville’s population shrank, and the various iterations of the paper ceased publication; the last holdout apparently being the Weekly Oil Review, which closed in 1911. Like the West Virginia Walking Beam and the Vocano Lubricator of Wood County just to the north, the West Virginia Daily Oil Review and its many variants shed light on western West Virginia’s once-prosperous oil history.
Provided By: West Virginia UniversityAbout this Newspaper
Title
- West Virginia Daily Oil Review (Sistersville, W. Va.) 1894-1902
Dates of Publication
- 1894-1902
Created / Published
- Sistersville, W. Va. : John H. McCoy, -1902.
Headings
- - Sistersville (W. Va.)--Newspapers
- - West Virginia--Sistersville
- - United States--West Virginia--Tyler--Sistersville
Genre
- Newspapers
Notes
- - Daily (except Sunday)
- - Began in 1894?
- - -v. 8, no. 2,294 (Aug. 5, 1902).
- - Archived issues are available in digital format from the Library of Congress Chronicling America online collection.
- - Issued also in a weekly entitled: Sistersville oil review.
- - Description based on: Vol. 1, no. 13 (Jan. 6, 1895).
- - Sistersville daily oil review 2576-6244 (DLC)sn 86092356 (OCoLC)13291281
Medium
- volumes
Call Number/Physical Location
- Newspaper
Library of Congress Control Number
- sn86092355
OCLC Number
- 13291263
ISSN Number
- 2576-5728
Succeeding Titles
Related Titles
LCCN Permalink
Additional Metadata Formats
Availability
- View All Front Pages
- Check the “Libraries that Have It” tab for additional newspaper issues, or, if present, select the LCCN Permalink for more LC holdings