![header=[Marker Text] body=[First successful device for increasing the flow of oil by setting off an explosion deep in a well. It was publicly demonstrated in 1865. The nitroglycerin was made .4 mile south of here, along Hammond Run.
] sign](kora/files/1/10/1-A-9B-139-ExplorePAHistory-a0a4y8-a_450.gif)
Mouse over for marker text
Name:
Roberts Torpedo
County:
Crawford
Marker Location:
Smock Blvd. (PA 8), Titusville
Dedication Date:
September 29, 1954
Behind the Marker
The development of technology to bring oil out of the ground and to market remained among the greatest challenges. Increasing profitability, not efficiency, was the task to which most technological innovation was applied.
Colonel E.A.L. Roberts, a Civil War veteran and explosives expert, came to Pennsylvania's oil region in 1865 and brought with him half a dozen torpedoes. The explosives were cast iron flasks, filled with gunpowder and ignited by a weight that dropped along a suspension wire onto percussion caps in the flask. On January 28 Roberts successfully discharged two of his 8-pound torpedoes into a well on Watson Flats, near Titusville. As Roberts cleared away debris the well emitted a steady flow. Roberts quickly set up a company and charged $100 to $200 per torpedo and a royalty of one-fifteenth of the increased flow of oil. By 1870, torpedo technology became commonplace.
Colonel E.A.L. Roberts, a Civil War veteran and explosives expert, came to Pennsylvania's oil region in 1865 and brought with him half a dozen torpedoes. The explosives were cast iron flasks, filled with gunpowder and ignited by a weight that dropped along a suspension wire onto percussion caps in the flask. On January 28 Roberts successfully discharged two of his 8-pound torpedoes into a well on Watson Flats, near Titusville. As Roberts cleared away debris the well emitted a steady flow. Roberts quickly set up a company and charged $100 to $200 per torpedo and a royalty of one-fifteenth of the increased flow of oil. By 1870, torpedo technology became commonplace.
Beyond the Marker