John D. Rockefeller’s Standard Oil, founded in 1870, once dominated American oil so completely that the government broke it up in 1911 into dozens of regional companies. Those descendants kept the Standard name in their own territories — which is why "Standard" signage varies so much by region and is such a rich vein for collectors.
"Esso" — a phonetic spelling of the initials S.O. (Standard Oil) — became a leading brand for the New Jersey successor, alongside regional names like Enco and Humble. The famous "Put a Tiger in Your Tank" campaign of the 1960s gave the brand one of advertising’s most memorable mascots.
Because the Standard name could not be used everywhere, the company eventually unified under a coined, conflict-free name — Exxon — in 1972, closing the Esso/Enco chapter in the United States and turning that signage into instant nostalgia.
There is no single Standard logo — there are many: the ubiquitous blue oval, the torch-and-oval, regional crowns, and the Esso "tiger." That variety, tied to Standard Oil’s 1911 breakup, makes this one of the deepest and most historically fascinating brands to collect.
The classic Standard torch-in-an-oval sign is a cornerstone of American petroliana.
The blue-white-red Esso oval is clean, iconic, and endlessly collectible.
"Put a Tiger in Your Tank" tails, signs, and giveaways are a beloved 1960s crossover.
Rockefeller’s Standard Oil dominates before the 1911 antitrust breakup.
The "S.O." → Esso brand emerges among the regional successors.
The tiger campaign runs before the U.S. brands unify as Exxon in 1972.
Live Standard / Esso listings pulled from eBay. Follow any piece straight to the seller.
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