Over 85 Years of Rocky Mountain Oil and Gas History!
Over 85 years ago a new Journal was introduced to the people of Montana. It
concerned a relatively new and growing industry in the state that would
eventually effect every citizen. The name of this new publication was the
Montana Oil Journal. The following Mission statement, which was written in 1921,
is as follows:
The Montana Oil Journal has been launched for the purpose of laying the oil
fields of the state before the eyes of its readers with each issue. Essentially,
it will be a magazine of oil news. Tremendous forces are producing oil and
carrying on the search for new strikes: events are going forward with the
velocity always apparent when the nucleus of a wealth-giving industry is formed.
This publication proposes to become the log of the oil fields.
The Journal will cover alike all sections of the state. Explorations will this
year be carried into many of the fields that give promise of production, and it
will be the business of the publication to record their progress and to report
the personnel of the oil world. The host of people who are backing their faith
in the Montana structures will find in it the news in which they are most
interested.
The sudden precipitation of the industry among more established lines found the
state without legislation, which eventually will be necessary to regulate the
fields and their output, and oil laws, actual and contemplated, will shortly be
of vital consequence. The discovery of gold, the stocking of the ranges, the
peopling of the prairies, the subduing of the soil each brought their distinct
problems, and so it will be with oil. No publication devoted to the best
interests of the industry can consistently avoid concerning itself with problems
upon which hinge the advancement of the fields and the welfare of their people.
So, with those brief remarks, the Montana Oil Journal was born. And like any
infant growing up, numerous changes have occurred within the industry that have
caused the paper to change. At one point the Journal changed its name from the
Montana Oil Journal to the Montana Oil and Mining Journal, due to increased
mining efforts in Montana for precious minerals. With the discovery of oil in
the Williston Basin, added coverage became mandatory for the paper to serve its
expanding readership. Just like the industry, which has seen its ups and downs,
so has the RMOJ. When the current owners of the paper purchased the Montana Oil
Journal in October of 1991, there wasn't even a rig running in the state of
Montana for that week.
But the belief in this industry to rebound and the resiliency of the people
involved in the oil and gas industry gave the current publisher & editor the
impetus to expand coverage and to change the name of the paper to the Rocky
Mountain Oil Journal. It is because of our subscribers and advertisers that the
paper (and now a web site) will hopefully continue publishing pertinent
information concerning our industry within the Rocky Mountain region well into
the future.
The paper is owned and operated by two veterans of the industry. Cody Huseby,
the editor, began his long career as Scout with Exxon. Jerry Davis, the
publisher, spent over 24 years with Halliburton's logging subsidiaries.
The RMOJ is not a glossy trade publication that sits out by the receptionist
area. It's the "salt of the earth" publication that people in the Rockies
actually use on a weekly basis. It is the industry standard in the
Rockies.