Crossword clues for amoco
amoco
- Former Standard Oil of Indiana
- British Petroleum merger partner
- Brand that evolved from Standard Oil of Indiana
- ___ Ultimate (fuel at BP stations)
- Standard Oil, later
- Standard Oil of Indiana
- Standard Oil company
- Pump brand reintroduced in 2017
- Onetime competitor of Gulf
- Old Exxon rival
- Old Exxon competitor
- Oil patch acronym
- Name at the pump
- Longtime name in gas
- Its logo includes a torch
- It merged with British Petroleum in 1998
- It merged with British Petroleum
- Introducer of the first metered gas pump
- Hess rival
- Global oil giant
- Gas station with a torch logo
- Gas station brand until 2001
- Gas company that merged with BP in 1998
- Gas company that had a torch in its logo
- Gas brand with a torch in its logo
- Gas brand whose logo featured a torch
- Gas brand that had a torch-and-oval logo
- Gas brand that had a torch in its logo
- Gas brand taken over by BP
- Gas brand relaunched in 2017
- Gas brand of BP
- Gas brand BP relaunched in 2017
- Gas brand absorbed by BP
- Fuel company absorbed by BP
- Fuel brand with a torch in its logo
- Former petroleum giant
- Former oil giant
- Former oil company symbolized by a torch
- Former Gulf competitor
- Former gas station chain with a torch in its logo
- Former Chevron competitor
- First off-shore driller, in 1947
- Erstwhile brand with a torch logo
- Defunct gas brand
- Company with a torch in its logo
- Company whose logo included a blue-and-red torch
- Company involved in 1978 oil spill
- Company bought by BP
- Classic roadside brand
- Classic oil brand with a 2017 revival
- Classic gas brand with a red, white, blue and black logo
- Citgo alternative
- Bygone BP gas brand
- British Petroleum acquisition
- Brand with a torch logo
- Brand acquired by BP
- BP buy of 1998
- Automotive brand with an oval logo
- 1990s BP acquisition
- Discontinued gas brand
- Texaco rival
- Big name in petroleum, once
- Exxon alternative
- Shell alternative
- Company that merged with BP, 1998
- 1999 British Petroleum acquisition
- British Petroleum acquisition of 1998
- Gulf rival, at one time
- Gulf competitor
- Exxon rival, once
- Company that merged with BP in 1998
- It merged with BP in 1998
- Gas company bought by BP
- Gas giant that merged with BP
- Former company with a torch in its logo
- Oil company that merged with BP
- 1998 BP purchase
- BP gas brand
- BP partner
- Oil company acquired by BP
- Bygone brand with a torch in its logo
- Brand with a torch in its logo
- 1998 BP acquisition
- Old brand whose logo featured a torch
- Bygone gas brand with a torch in its logo
- Bygone gas station name
- Bygone station name
- BP merger partner of 1998
- Old company whose logo featured a torch
- Bygone fuel giant with a torch in its logo
- Getty rival
- Bygone brand with a torch logo
- Shell competitor
- BP merger partner of '98
- Exxon competitor
- Petroleum giant
- Oil giant that built what is now Chicago's Aon Center
- BP subsidiary gas brand
- BP acquisition of 1998
- Big name in gasoline, once
- Standard Oil offshoot
- Name at the pumps
- It began as Standard Oil of Indiana
- BP merger mate
- BP acquisition
- Petroleum company
- Oil giant acquired by BP
- Mobil rival
- Merged gas company
- Gas brand that merged with BP in 1998
- BP brand
- 1998 BP merger partner
- Sunoco rival
- It's now BP
- It started as Standard Oil of Indiana
- It merged with British Petroleum in '98
- Gas brand that merged with BP
Wikipedia
Amoco Corporation, originally Standard Oil Company (Indiana), was a global chemical and oil company that was founded in 1889 around a refinery located in Whiting, Indiana, United States.
It later absorbed the American Oil Company, founded in Baltimore in 1910 and incorporated in 1922 by Louis Blaustein and his son Jacob. Amoco merged with British Petroleum in December 1998, forming BP Amoco. Shortly after the merger, Amoco stations began a rebranding that saw the stations change their names to the BP marque while continuing to sell Amoco-branded fuel. Eventually all traces of the Amoco brand name were eliminated and the stations adopted the BP branding permanently, although Amoco's grade naming system is still in use.
The firm's innovations included two essential parts of the modern industry, the gasoline tanker truck and the drive-through filling station. Its headquarters were located in the Amoco Building (now the Aon Center) in Chicago, Illinois.