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Fueled by a green dinosaur

Sinclair

1916 — present
Founded
1916 by Harry F. Sinclair
Heritage
New York / Tulsa
Active
1916 — present

The story

Harry F. Sinclair assembled the Sinclair Oil & Refining Corporation in 1916 by rolling up a string of smaller producers, and within a few years it was one of the largest independents in the country. (Sinclair was also caught up in the Teapot Dome scandal of the 1920s — a reminder that the oil business was as political as it was profitable.)

Sinclair’s masterstroke was marketing. In the 1930s it tied its motor oils to the idea that petroleum came from the age of the dinosaurs — "mellowed 80 million years" — and adopted a friendly green Brontosaurus as a mascot. Dino was pure genius: memorable, kid-friendly, and impossible to confuse with any competitor.

The dinosaur showed up everywhere — on signs, inflatable giveaways, and a famous dinosaur exhibit at the 1964 New York World’s Fair. Generations of American children knew Sinclair not as an oil company but as "the dinosaur gas."

The mark: Dino the green Brontosaurus

Sinclair’s green Apatosaurus (marketed as a Brontosaurus) is one of the great figural mascots in advertising. Die-cut Dino signs, Dino figurals, and the green-and-white color scheme make Sinclair material some of the most decorative — and most collected — in the hobby.

Signature collectibles

Dino die-cut signs

Signs cut to the shape of the dinosaur are the definitive Sinclair collectible and a magnet for figural collectors.

H-C & Dino Supreme globes

Pump globes for Sinclair H-C and Dino Supreme gasolines carry the green branding onto the pump island.

Dino promotional toys

Inflatable Dinos, banks, and World’s Fair souvenirs cross over into the toy and advertising markets.

Era by era

1910s–1920s

The roll-up

Sinclair grows fast by absorbing independents; early signage is text-forward and heraldic.

1930s

Enter Dino

The dinosaur mascot arrives to sell the "mellowed 80 million years" story; green becomes the brand color.

1960s

World’s Fair fame

Sinclair’s Dinoland at the 1964 World’s Fair makes the mascot a national icon.

What to look for

  • Die-cut Dino conditionThe dinosaur’s slender neck and tail chip easily — original die-cuts with intact extremities command a premium.
  • Green shadeSinclair green is specific; wrong or faded greens can flag a repaint or reproduction.
  • World’s Fair crossover1964 Dinoland souvenirs are collected by both petroliana and World’s Fair enthusiasts.
On the block now

Sinclair relics for sale

Live Sinclair listings pulled from eBay. Follow any piece straight to the seller.

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