Cancel

Open app

Search

Chevron

2.7 (6 reviews)
Closed • 6:30 am - 9:00 pm

Chevron Photos

You might also consider

Recommended Reviews - Chevron

Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
Yelp app icon
Browse more easily on the app
Review Feed Illustration

11 months ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0
Photo of T E.
0
78
49

2 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

1 year ago

I love this gas station, it's close but also it's really well taken care of and has a nice clean feel. The bathroom is especially nice

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

2 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

6 years ago

Helpful 1
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

11 years ago

Helpful 0
Thanks 0
Love this 0
Oh no 0

Ask the Community - Chevron

You might also consider

Verify this business for free

People searched for Gas Stations 1,495 times last month within 15 miles of this business.

Verify this business

Chevron

Chevron

(5 reviews)

for the older people on yelp, this is the old haneys service station…read more located in old Town b.g. staff is always nice and courteous. they sell all grades of gas, diesel, and propane. no off hwy diesel though. fuel prices are always a little on the higher side. it is a great place to stop in and buy beer, soda, milk, whatever on your way home. without having to drive into b.g.

I stop by here the other day for some gas and I have to say its a very nice store…read more One of Chevron's early predecessors, Star Oil, discovered oil at the Pico Canyon Oilfield in the Santa Susana Mountains north of Los Angeles in 1876. The 25 barrels of oil per day well marked the discovery of the Newhall Field, and is considered by geophysicist Marius Vassiliou as the beginning of the modern oil industry in California.[5] Energy analyst Antonia Juhasz has said that while Star Oil's founders were influential in establishing an oil industry in California, Union Mattole Company discovered oil in the state eleven years prior.[6] In September 1879, Charles N. Felton, Lloyd Tevis, George Loomis and others created the Pacific Coast Oil Company, which acquired the assets of Star Oil[5] with $1 million in funding.[7] Pacific Coast Oil became the largest oil interest in California,[7] by time it was acquired by Standard Oil for $761,000 in 1900.[5] Pacific Coast operated independently and retained its name until 1906, when it was merged with a Standard Oil subsidiary and it became Standard Oil Company (California) or California Standard.[8][9] Another predecessor, Texas Fuel Company, was founded in 1901 in Beaumont, Texas as an oil equipment vendor by "Buckskin Joe". The founder's nickname came from being harsh and aggressive.[6] Texas Fuel worked closely with Chevron. In 1936 it formed a joint venture with California Standard named Caltex, to drill and produce oil in Saudi Arabia.[10] According to energy analyst and activist shareholder Antonia Juhasz,[11][12][13] the Texas Fuel Company and California Standard were often referred to as the "terrible twins" for their cutthroat business practices.[14] The Texas Fuel Company was renamed the Texas Company, and later renamed Texaco.[9][14] Formation of the Chevron name A Chevron station branded as "Standard" in Las Vegas In 1911, Standard Oil Co. (California) was severed from its parent corporation, Standard Oil, as a result of the federal government's successful lawsuit against Standard Oil under the Sherman Antitrust Act. It went on to become part of the "Seven Sisters", which dominated the world oil industry in the early 20th century.[15] In 1926, the company changed its name to Standard Oil Co. of California (SOCAL). By the terms of the breakup of Standard Oil, Standard of California could use the Standard name only within its original geographic area of the Pacific coast states, plus Nevada and Arizona; outside that area, it had to use another name. The Chevron name came into use for some of its retail products in the 1930s. The name Calso was also used from 1946 to 1955 in states outside its native West Coast territory.[16][17][18][better source needed] Standard Oil Company of California ranked 75th among United States corporations in the value of World War II military production contracts.[19] In 1933, Saudi Arabia granted California Standard a concession to find oil, which led to the discovery of oil in 1938. In 1948, California Standard discovered the world's largest oil field in Saudi Arabia, Ghawar Field.[20] California Standard's subsidiary, California-Arabian Standard Oil Company, grew over the years and became the Arabian American Oil Company (ARAMCO) in 1944. In 1973, the Saudi government began buying into ARAMCO. By 1980, the company was entirely owned by the Saudis, and in 1988, its name was changed to Saudi Arabian Oil Company--Saudi Aramco.[citation needed] Standard Oil of California and Gulf Oil merged in 1984, which was the largest merger in history at that time. To comply with U.S. antitrust law,California Standard divested many of Gulf's operating subsidiaries, and sold some Gulf stations and a refinery in the eastern United States. (The refinery is currently owned by Sunoco.) Among the assets sold off were Gulf's retail outlets in Gulf's home market of Pittsburgh, where Chevron lacks a retail presence but does retain a regional headquarters there as of 2013, partially for Marcellus Shale-related drilling.[21] The same year, Standard Oil of California also took the opportunity to change its legal name to Chevron Corporation, since it had already been using the well-known "Chevron" retail brand name for decades. Chevron would sell the Gulf Oil trademarks for the entire U.S. to Cumberland Farms, the parent company of Gulf Oil LP, in 2010 after Cumberland Farms had a license to the Gulf trademark in the Northeastern United States since 1986.[22] In 1996 Chevron transferred its natural gas gathering, operating and marketing operation to NGC Corporation (later Dynegy) in exchange for a roughly 25% equity stake in NGC.[23] In a merger completed February 1, 2000, Illinova Corp. became a wholly owned subsidiary of Dynegy Inc. and Chevron's stake increased up to 28%.[24] However, in May 2007 Chevron sold its stake in the company for approximately $985 million, resulting in a gain of $680 million.

Chevron - servicestations - Updated May 2026

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...