Prosperous times swept America
following the discovery of oil on Signal Hill, helping end the Depression of
1920-1921. A new industry had been born. By 1924 oil surpassed agriculture as
the leading industry in California. In
Southern California alone that year 230 million barrels of crude oil was pumped
out of the ground. Everyone seemed to want to make a quick buck from all the
oil flowing on and around Signal Hill.
Oil deals were being made every day, many of them by Long Beach
businessmen like Willard C. Campbell, John McDuffie, Walter Lee Tully, Charles
P. Knight and William R. Buck of the Bay Hills Oil and Land Company.
In the fall of 1922, the five original
promoters of the Bay Hills Oil and Land Company contributed $5000 ($77,000) each
to begin their corporation. Their first
course of business was to buy five town lots on Signal Hill for $20,000
($308,500). John McDuffie made the purchase in his name, taking title and later
transferring title to the company for $35,000 ($540,000)--- the five investors
pocketing the $15,000 ($231,375) profit.
With actual land in their possession, they quickly lured backers into
purchasing 2250 units of stock for $100 ($1545) per unit, telling investors
they would drill one oil well when $225,000 ($3,471,000) was raised. Fifty percent of those encouraged by “oily”
talks of promoters were women over 60 years of age, who invested their life
savings in the company. The promoters promised their shareholders they
themselves would derive no money from the sale of any unit until the investors
had received all their money back. This
was an out and out lie, for Campbell, McDuffie, Tully, Knight and Buck were
drawing monthly salaries ranging from $1000 ($15450) to $1500 ($23,137) each.
Other transgressions
followed. After the original stock was
sold, the five set up another company, the Special Delivery Oil Syndicate,
which they opened to investors.
Questionable practices included purchasing an oil lease for $12,500 ($193,000)
and then selling it to the Special Delivery Oil Syndicate for $15,000
($231,375) , splitting the profit between them.
On October 14, 1924, Willard C. Campbell, who
had become one of the most prominent and respected oil stock salesmen in Long
Beach, was arrested for mail fraud along with John McDuffie, Walter Lee Tully,
Charles P. Knight, William R. Buck and their attorney Joseph G.
Richardson. Mail fraud was one of the
few legal ways to pursue the sharks who fed off the hopes of the small
investor. Long Beach folk were shocked that such noteworthy members of the
community had been scam artists.
John H. McDuffie, president of
the Bay Hills Land and Oil Company of Long Beach and its subsidiary the Special
Delivery Oil Syndicate, denied the company ever did any business through the
mails. Instead, he claimed, they hired
passenger buses to bring the public to the oil fields. It was common practice among oil
promoters. Every morning the buses lined
the streets in Los Angeles and other Southern California communities
advertising free lunches, and band concerts as well as a chance to see the
gushers first hand. McDuffie neglected
to mention that along the way salesmen made their pitch. As they motored past the mansions of business
tycoons, movie stars and especially oil moguls, oil promoters made sure to
point out that anyone could live a life of leisure if they invested in oil
development. The passengers, primed by the promotion, responded emotionally, rather
than rationally, and lined up eagerly to purchase shares in not only Bay Hills
Land and Oil, but other oil companies as well.
Prospective investors |
McDuffie told the press that the
trouble with his oil firm was brought about not through any intent to defraud
anyone, but by poor management. Somehow,
McDuffie said, the bills began to pile up and creditors began to demand payment
until investors began to get worried.
Shareholders weren’t buying his sob story.
On July 6, 1925, the Bay Hills
Oil partners and the company’s attorney Joseph Richardson went on trial for
mail fraud, having delayed the legal action as long as they could. Investors
wanted their money.
“The
law is full of loopholes,” Los Angeles
Times writer Walter V. Woehlke later wrote about another fraud, the Julian
Pete scandal. “To the layman it is perfectly clear that a criminal fraud of
vast proportions has been committed, that tens of thousands of innocent people
have been bunked out of an unknown number of millions, but the way to legal
proof and conviction lies through a jungle of technicalities in which it is
easy to get lost.” (Los Angeles Times, 10/17/1927)
Woehlke was right. Though
Willard C. Campbell, John McDuffie, Walter Lee Tully, Charles P. Knight, Joseph
G. Richardson and William R. Buck had defrauded 5000 investors of $750,000 ($11.6
million) , they merely got a slap on the hand, fined $2500 ($38,500) each and
given ten months suspended jail sentences.
However, the story has a happy ending.
In February 1929, “Special
Delivery No. 1,” located at Locust and 31st Street, which had been
taken over by the Cypress Petroleum Company, hit pay dirt, with promises of
over 2,000 barrels of oil a day. The property that was nearly lost for taxes
and given up as hopeless, had now became a valuable asset. However, few had
recorded their deeds to the well and over half of the “unit holders” could not
be found. Those that had recorded their deeds were entitled to a portion of the
earnings. For those that couldn’t verify a legal filing, the funds accrued
would revert to the state in five years. Many were lucky to recover their original
investment, but little else. The Great Depression would see the price of oil
fall to an all-time low.
Though this story had a happy
ending, this was just the tip of the iceberg, the first of several local oil
scandals to follow.
C.C. Julian |
In June 1924 his new company,
the Julian Petroleum Corporation, purchased the holdings of the Grump-Steele
Company of Long Beach, including contracts on the production of twenty Signal
Hill oil wells for $75,000 ($1.13
million today). Julian also had
interests in the Alamitos Heights oil field with wells near Colorado Avenue and
Ultimo Avenue. This was but a small portion of Julian’s supposed massive oil
investments.
Julian bypassed the usual
techniques used by oil promoters who laid siege to Pershing Square in downtown
Los Angeles each morning. Impressive
buses heading for the oil fields filled the streets advertising free lunches,
band concerts as well as a chance to see the wells up close. Julian’s approach was different. He didn’t rely on bus rides to entice
people. Instead, he wrote his own ads
which encapsulated the hopes and dispelled the fears of the small investor. He
charmed many into putting money into his oil syndicate, despite warnings from
the California Corporations Department and Harry Chandler of the Los Angeles Times who finally caught on
to Julian’s schemes and refused to print his ads. Penniless when he began, Julian managed to
raise a lot of money from those he conned. C.C. Julian was the Bernie Madoff of
his day. It was not long before 40,000
folks had invested $11 million ($166 million) in the stock of Julian Petroleum. His appeals
for funds were so successful that one particular stock issue was oversubscribed
by $75,000 ($1.13 million). However,
the law eventually caught up with him.
Bribes and high salaries to
bankers and government officials hid what was really happening---more Julian
stock was being traded than was supposed to exist. But the Ponzi scheme, where early investors
are paid off with the money of later investors, began to spin faster and
faster, demanding more and more cash. As
the “little guy” investors began to get a putrid whiff of what was really
happening panic spread. The “Average
Joe” saw his money in Julian vaporize.
The Julian fiasco was merely the
prelude to the devastation that came after 1929. When the Richfield Oil Company went into
receivership in 1931, an audit revealed an operating loss of $54 million ($920
million). Items such as alimony, hotel
rooms, purchases of jewelry, repair of speedboats and so forth had been
blithely charged to the company. Then
the Guaranty Building and Loan Association failed (its president had embezzled
$8 million), then the American Mortgage Company failed for $18 million ($306
million). Nearly every major financial
debacle involved some political figure, a judge, public official or some well know
fixer, Carey McWilliams wrote in Southern
California Country. McWilliams also pointed out that in earlier times
investors had purchased something physical, such as property (at whatever
inflated price), but with Julian stock certificates all they had were pieces of
paper.
The Julian scandal, coinciding
with the onslaught of the Depression, pauperized at least 500,000 Southern
Californians. Its consequences would ripple on and on, gaining force until in
1930 the region led the nation in the number of bankruptcies and in the amount
of net losses in bankruptcy proceedings. The scandal contributed to the
collapse of the First National Bank, the election of former Ku Klux Klansman
John Porter as mayor of Los Angeles, and the defeat of California Governor C.C.
Young in his bid for re-election.
More about this time in my book Prohibition Madness.
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