Someone asked whether the new signage at Courtesy Corner meant that the 70-year-old gas station in Albany had been sold. The answer, I’m happy to report, is no. It remains the same family business it has been since 1962.
The change in brands, from Shell to Sinclair, took place earlier this month. But the station ownership is the same.
“It’s our family business,” I was reminded Wednesday by Taylor Smith, who manages the station. At 66, Taylor is one of four children of the late Ronald L. Smith, who bought the business in 1962 and died, at age 90, in May 2023.
From my brief chat with Taylor, I gathered that the change to Sinclair was a business decision based on a number of factors, including a slightly lower price of the fuel.
On its website, Sinclair says it delivers fuel to more than 1,500 independently owned stations in 30 states. As near as I can tell, though, this is the only Sinclair station in the vicinity. The company’s website has not yet caught up with the Albany change and says the nearest Sinclair station is in Tigard.
Sinclair has a long history, having been founded in 1916. It adopted a dinosaur as its logo in the 1930s to remind people it was making “lubricants refined from crude oil believed to have formed when dinosaurs roamed the earth,” according to the website.
The Linn County tax department says the station was built in 1954.
During the Smith ownership since 1962, the station became renowned for its friendly service in keeping with its name. Over the years it also employed hundreds of high school and college-age people to provide that service.
That’s another thing that hasn’t changed. The young people I encounter there are still friendly and helpful, and they’ll still clean your windshield while you wait for the pump to shut off. (hh)
In 1974 on the way to church riding in the back of our big block staion wagon, the kind where you looked the other way if you sat in back, we would get gas before church every Sunday at 10 a.m. because a full tank would last you a week at 10 bucks at Courtesy Corner.
John Brewer
(Lived in Albany for 54 years, still fill up my work vans to this day, which is 100 bucks. To fill up and see Taylor. Good stuff.)
Thanks, Hasso, for that article on the gas station. I didn’t know any of that.
I always liked when dad stopped at Sinclair on our family vacations back to Nebraska because of their dinosaur logo. Didn’t know they had made it to Oregon until I saw the change at Courtesy Corner.
The dinosaur is a symbol of Taylor’s age.