The Texas Company was founded in 1902 in Beaumont, in the shadow of the Spindletop gusher that had turned Texas into the center of the American oil world a year earlier. Backed by Joseph "Buckskin Joe" Cullinan and New York financier Arnold Schlaet, it grew from a crude-trading outfit into one of the great integrated majors.
By 1928 Texaco had done what no competitor had managed: it was selling gasoline in all 48 states under a single brand and a single red star. That national footprint, paired with relentless advertising, made the star one of the most familiar images on the American roadside for the next half century.
Radio and, later, television cemented the brand in popular culture. "Texaco Star Theatre" made Milton Berle a household name, and the promise that you could "Trust your car to the man who wears the star" turned service-station attendants into brand ambassadors in crisp uniforms and bow ties.
Texaco’s emblem — a white-bordered red star with a green "T" at its center — has survived more than a century with only gentle refinement. The bold, high-contrast graphic reads instantly from a distance, which is exactly why it dominates so many collectible sign shapes.
The round-topped, narrow-necked porcelain identification sign — the "banjo" shape — is Texaco’s most iconic format and a cornerstone of any serious collection.
Pump globes for Texaco’s "Fire-Chief" gasoline, complete with a fireman’s helmet graphic, are among the most sought-after and reproduced globes in the hobby.
Sky Chief (premium) and Fire-Chief (regular) pump plates and globes let collectors assemble a matched, period-correct pump island.
Early Texaco signage carries an ornate star-in-a-"T" crest, heavy on serifs and detail.
The Fire-Chief brand and its fireman graphics define the classic pre-war look; banjo signs proliferate.
The clean red-star-and-"T" on a white ground reaches its most familiar, minimal form on big porcelain station signs.
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