- New York (shortened to
Socony)
after Standard Oil was
split into 43
different entities in a 1911
Supreme Court decision.
Socony merged with
Vacuum Oil...
- The
Socony–Mobil Building, also
known as 150 East 42nd Street, is a 45-story, 572-foot-tall (174 m) skys****er in the
Murray Hill and East
Midtown neighborhoods...
- 26 Broadway, also
known as the
Standard Oil
Building or
Socony–Vacuum Building, is an
office building adjacent to
Bowling Green in the
Financial District...
- Asia. The
North China Department of
Socony (Standard Oil
Company of New York)
operated a
subsidiary called Socony River and
Coastal Fleet,
North Coast...
-
Socony-Vacuum's
gasoline buying practices led to the
major antitrust law case
United States v.
Socony-Vacuum Oil Co. The case
originated with
Socony-Vacuum's...
- from 1919 to 1921. The ship was
owned by
Standard Oil
Company of New York (
Socony), and was just one of the
Arrow class oil
tankers built to
modernize the...
-
Standard buying Texas-based
Humble Oil and
Socony merging with
Standard descendant Vacuum Oil to form
Socony-Vacuum. The two
companies collaborated in...
- 1931
Vacuum Oil
merged with the
Standard Oil
Company of New York to form
Socony-Vacuum,
later renamed to
Mobil and
eventually merging with the Standard...
- (formerly
American Lawyer Media) is a
media company headquartered in the
Socony–Mobil
Building in Manhattan, and is a
provider of
specialized business news...
-
United States v.
Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., 310 U.S. 150 (1940), is a 1940
United States Supreme Court decision widely cited for the
proposition that price-fixing...