Paul G. Blazer Explained

Paul G. Blazer
Birth Date:September 19, 1890
Birth Place:New Boston, Illinois, United States
Death Date:December 9, 1966 (age 76)
Death Place:Scottsdale, Arizona, United States
Resting Place:Ashland Cemetery, Ashland, Kentucky, United States
Known For:Founder (1924), president (1936–1944), and CEO (1944–1957) of Ashland Oil and Refining Company, Inc. / Ashland, Inc.; supporter of education
Employer:Ashland, Inc., Ashland Oil and Refining Company, Inc, Swiss Oil Company
Occupation:President and CEO of Ashland Inc.
Years Active:1924–1957
Spouse:Georgia Monroe (April 1917)(1895–1991)
Children:3

Paul Garrett Blazer (September 19, 1890 – December 9, 1966) was president and CEO of Ashland Oil and Refining Company (Ashland, Inc.) located in Ashland, Kentucky.

Early life

Blazer was born on September 19, 1890, in New Boston, Illinois to Presbyterians David Newton Blazer and Mary Melinda Blazer (née Janes).[1] Blazer's father's childhood home was station number three on the Underground Railroad that began at Quincy, Illinois and was described as being on "the avenue to freedom in Canada for runaway slaves from Missouri and Kentucky and hundreds of them passing through to freedom were harbored at the Blazer home." Blazer's father, his father's brother and father's sister were school teachers. His father left the teaching profession as a school principal and subsequently became the publisher of the nearby Aledo Times-Record regional newspaper.[2]

At the age of 12, Blazer began selling magazine subscriptions for The Saturday Evening Post and Ladies Home Journal, and he eventually hired a full-time secretary.[1] Blazer was a star on his high school football team and a track star in high school and in college.[1] After high school, he enrolled at William & Vashti College in Aledo, Illinois. After one year of college, Blazer joined the Educational Division of Curtis Publishing Company in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as manager of its school subscriptions.[2] His responsibilities included devising advertisements that ran in the Saturday Evening Post.

While in Philadelphia, Blazer became active in the progressive Bull Moose Party and former President Theodore Roosevelt's unsuccessful campaign for the 1912 Republican Party presidential nomination. Blazer ended up on the platform with President Roosevelt for his April 10 whistle-stop train tour stop in Philadelphia. Blazer left Curtis Publishing and Philadelphia in 1914, and returned to his magazine business in Illinois. On a Curtis Publishing scholarship, he enrolled at the University of Chicago, earning an associate degree in philosophy in 1915. The scholarship was conditional on maintaining 400 magazine subscriptions. Blazer further expanded his subscription business when he purchased a renewal subscriptions business with 960 customers in 1914 and another renewal subscription business in 1916 with 1900 customers from a Curtis distributor in Chicago, further expanding his magazine business in Chicago and into Milwaukee. While attending University of Chicago, Blazer was the student coordinator for the student sports program and business manager of the Cap & Gown yearbook staff. Under his direction they achieved record income.[1]

In 1917, during World War I, Blazer entered the 123rd U.S. Army Hospital Unit organized by the university, received a medical discharge due to an accident later that year.[2] He worked a short time for Chittenden Press in Chicago before going to The Great Northern Refining Co. as advertising manager. He quickly moved into the sales department and in 1918 became sales manager.[1]

In April 1917, Blazer married Georgia Monroe, whom he had met at the University of Chicago. The Blazers had three children: Paul Garrett Jr., Doris Virginia, and Stuart Monroe. In 1939, Governor Happy Chandler appointed Mrs. Blazer the first female trustee on the University of Kentucky Board of Trustees.[3] In 1962, Blazer Hall was opened as the Georgia M Blazer Hall [dormitory] for Women in tribute to her 21 years of service on the board.[4] [5] She also served on Kentucky's Council on Public Higher Education.[6]

Oil industry career

In 1920, Paul Blazer went to work as vice president of the Great Southern Oil & Refining Company in Lexington, Kentucky. In 1924 he joined the Swiss Oil Company of Lexington and was in charge of constructing and managing the operations of Ashland Refining Co. in Ashland, Kentucky. Blazer's work managing the company meant that from 1924 to 1957 he was regarded as head of the Ashland family.[2]

In 1930, Blazer became vice president of the newly established Independent Petroleum Association of America, a position he held for ten years. During Franklin Delano Roosevelt's first presidential term in the summer of 1933, J. Howard Marshall, a young assistant solicitor from Yale Law School working for Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes, launched on a code of fair competition for the petroleum industry.[7] The oil industry sent representatives, including Blazer, to Washington D.C. Blazer served as chairman of the United States Department of the Interior's Petroleum Code Survey Committee on Small Business Enterprise, referred to as the "Blazer Committee". (1933–1936).[8]

While working for the Department of Interior[1] Blazer lobbied the Department of Interior's New Deal agency, the Works Progress Administration, for Kentucky projects, including Ashland's new sewers, new public library and a concrete athletic stadium.

Blazer later became a charter member of the Petroleum Industry Council for National Defense. While Roosevelt was giving his declaration of war speech before the joint session of the United States Congress in Washington D.C., Blazer was several blocks away in preparations for war meetings. After the 1941 outbreak of World War II and the United States imminent inclusion many members of the council, including Blazer, went to work for the Petroleum Administration for War Council as "dollar-a-year men" again under the Secretary of Interior Ickes, Director Ralph K. Davies and now Solicitor J. Howard Marshall. Its purpose was to "mobilize most effectively all resources and abilities of the petroleum industry to deal with the emergency conditions under which the industry must operate, and to provide a competent, responsible and representative body."[9] July 11, 1941, Secretary Ickes appointed Blazer to District 2's General [oversight] Committee, the Supply and Distribution Committee and Chairman of the District 2 Refining Committee. He served from Council's official creation December 31, 1941 to its dissolution December 6, 1946. During this period the Department of Interior disbursements for the construction of aviation gasoline facilities amounted to $235,836,850.80, which included the 1942 $6,000,000 expansion of the Catlettsburg refinery.

Blazer was on Kentucky Governor Simeon S. Willis' WWII Postwar Planning Commission and he was the chairman of the Transportation Committee. He later served as chairman of the unsuccessful state legislative mandated campaign for a Kentucky constitutional convention (1946–1947).[2]

Blazer was a director and member of the American Petroleum Institute and a member of the National Petroleum Council. He served as a director the Cincinnati Branch Office of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland (1945–1950) and served two years as chairman (1949 and 1950).[2]

The National Petroleum Council (US) was established in 1946 at the request of President Harry S. Truman to represent industry views on Department of Interior matters relating to oil and natural gas.[9] Blazer served on the council from 1946 to 1957.[10]

Blazer kept Ashland Oil and Refining Company active in the Ohio Valley Improvement Association, which was located in the Cincinnati Federal Reserve Bank Building.[1]

Blazer and Hull were prominently involved in the implementation of the Department of Interior's and the United States Army Corps of Engineers' 1953 $200,000,000 Ohio River Navigation Modernization Program, the first such projects since 1929.[1] [11] The projects approved construction of 19 new dual locks and high-lift dams (current list of locks and dams of the Ohio River). The Program contained eight new projects in the portion of the Ohio River owned by Kentucky, and contained the rare structural plans for a bridge over the top of the Greenup County, Kentucky dam. The Greenup Dam is just down river from Ashland was known at the time as The Paul G. Blazer Dam,[12] received site priority.[13] and was built in the 1950s without completion of the bridge top.

Blazer appeared before the U.S. Congress on several occasions testifying on proposed regulations affecting the oil industry and in 1956 testified against a proposed tax on use of the nation's waterways. Blazer, at age 70, was elected chairman and president of the newly established National Waterways Conference in 1960 and re-elected as chairman in 1961.[1]

In 1964, Blazer became the 34th inductee of the Oil Hall of Fame by the National Petroleum News magazine.

Support for education in Kentucky

Blazer recognition and awards (1946–1960)

Other recognitions included:

School naming request (1957)

In 1957 Blazer again played a significant role in the Ashland area's higher education opportunities with his work towards the University of Kentucky taking over the teaching and day-to-day operations from the Ashland Independent School District's Board of Education for the Ashland Junior College.

The Prestonsburg, Kentucky bus disaster occurred February 28 barely two months after Blazer's acceptance of the Ashland School Board's request to name the new high school after him. 26 school children and the bus driver died when a school bus plunged into the Big Sandy River outside of nearby Prestonsburg, KY. At the time, it was the deadliest bus accident in United States history.[20]

Death

Blazer died on December 9, 1966, at the age of 76.[21]

The Stuart Blazer Foundation (1952–1975)

After 20 years of Ashland area grants, the Stuart Blazer Foundation was terminated in the 1970s. On the recommendation of Paul and Georgia's son Paul Jr. and daughter Doris, one-half of the remaining funds paid for the initial restoration of the Paramount Movie Theater (Paramount Arts Center) in Ashland (associated with Paul Jr.) and one-half of the remaining funds paid for the building and one year's operation of the Ashland Tennis Center before being given to the city of Ashland (associated with Doris).

The Blazer family funded the Blazer Lecture Series at the University of Kentucky in memory of their son Stuart.[2]

References

Bibliography

Books

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: 1979 . The National Cyclopedia of American Biography . James T. White & Company . Clifton, NJ. 58: "Blazer, Paul Garrett". 104–105.
  2. Book: John E. Kleber Editor-in Chief, The Kentucky Encyclopedia: Blazer, Paul Garrett (Lexington : University of Kentucky Press, 1992)Page 87. 0813128838. Kleber. John E. University Press of Kentucky.
  3. Web site: Minutes of Mrs. Blazer's first Regular Meeting of the Board of Trustees, University of Kentucky, April 4, 1939 . December 13, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141214045751/http://kdl.kyvl.org/catalog/xt7d251fjp5f_1 . December 14, 2014 . dead .
  4. Web site: Minutes of Regular Meeting of the Board of Trustees, University of Kentucky, President Dickey's recommendation and the Board's approval in the naming of the "Georgia M. Blazer Hall" dormitory for women, (pages 48 & 49), June 4, 1962.
  5. Web site: Blazer Hall (+history).
  6. Web site: Minutes of Regular Meeting of the Board of Trustees, University of Kentucky, Mrs. Blazer resigns from Kentucky's Council on Public Higher Education, September 21, 1954 .
  7. Web site: University of Florida Digital Collections (UFDC): National Recovery Administration - Code of Fair Competition for the Petroleum Industry August 19, 1933 . September 28, 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150923175236/http://www.ashland.com/about/history-heritage . September 23, 2015 . dead .
  8. Web site: National Archives Identifier: 7261744 HMS Entry Number: NC-79 28 Records Relating to the Blazer Committee Hearing, 1933 - 1936 . 2017-09-07 . 2015-04-02 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150402155833/http://research.archives.gov/description/7261744 . dead .
  9. Web site: About NPC: National Petroleum Council Origin and Operations.
  10. Book: 1964 . Who's Who in America – A Biographical Dictionary of Notable Living Men and Women (. 33) (1964–1965). 190.
  11. Web site: National Mississippi River Museum & Aquarium - Achievement Award Winners - William J. Hull.
  12. Web site: PlaceKeeper: Greenup Locks and Dam, Kentucky.
  13. Web site: Michael C. Robinson: National Waterways Study – U.S. Army Engineer Water Resources Support Center – Institute for Water Resources: History of Navigation in the Ohio River Basin 1983 Page 39.
  14. Web site: UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY ALGERNON SYDNEY SULLIVAN AWARD – Past Recipients - 1948.
  15. Web site: Filson Club notice of Paul G. Blazer's appointment to Centre College Board of Trustees 1953.
  16. Web site: Welcome to Paul G. Blazer Library.
  17. Web site: Kentucky State College Thorobred Yearbook 1960: Dedication and Opening of Paul Blazer Library (pages 100-102).
  18. Web site: Fred M. Vinson, bio.com . 2015-04-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171201081934/https://www.biography.com/people/fred-vinson-40076#distinguished-politician . 2017-12-01 . dead .
  19. Book: 1960 . The United States of America Congressional Record proceedings and debates of the 86th Congress, 2nd session (Tuesday, June 28, 1960 – Washington D.C.) . 106#20, "Integration in Kentucky – Extension of Remarks of Hon. Carl D Perkins of Kentucky – Kentucky State College commencement address by Paul G. Blazer". A5602–A5603.
  20. Web site: Big Sandy Bus Accident 1958. sites.rootsweb.com.
  21. Web site: Minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Trustees of the University of Kentucky, "notes with sorrow the death of PAUL G. BLAZER, SR.", December 13, 1966 .