19.9 cents/gal in Wellsburg West Virginia, pre “oil crisis” 1973.
I was a paper boy and delivered the paper to the Clark station on Commerce Street. They got in a "Gas War with the station across the street. It was either a Texaco or a Sinclair station.
Before the 1972 gas crisis, I remember my mother driving into a Shell station* with me and my siblings. She pulled up to the pump, the attendant# asked what she wanted, and she said, “Put a dollar’s worth of Regular in it.”
The attendant raised his eyebrows and said, “That much?”
My brother looked over and said, “Mom. We’re not that empty.”
My sister and I had no idea what all the fuss was about.
–G!
*La Mesa, CA; Jackson Drive and Center Street. Still there?
We used to drive from Arlington VA to Danville VA to visit family. Probably once a month. This was 1950-1958. Gas(Esso) in the Washington DC area was always 29.9/gal. We quite often got 19.9/gal as we approached Danville. Gas war.
UK prices, we also had a currency change so its not see easy to remember.
It was equal to around 32 pence in todays currency in around 1968, and that’s for an imperial gallon.
Today it costs 99 pence per litre, which is around £4.50per gallon - which turns out to be $6.41
I don’t know the $ to £ trade rates for 1968, maybe someone can help - remember though that I have changed from our old currency and petrol back then was around 6 shillings
The first price I can really recall is $1.20 in 1999. I have no idea why I don’t remember any prices from earlier than that - I got my license at the end of 1993 so I’d obviously bought gas dozens of times by that point.
I was surprised to think back and remember that there have been times gas dropped back under a buck. I remember mostly around 1980 when it first broke the dollar mark and none of the pumps at the time could handle it; the displays didn’t go up that far. So for several months you were buying it by the half-gallon until everyone could refit their equipment.
When I started driver’s training in So Cal gasoline was generally 29 cents a gallon. Frequently “gas wars” brought it down to 19 cents at local stations. By the time I graduated driver’s training the first Oil Crisis had happened and gas cost $1.25 on the rare days you could get it without waiting in a one hour line.
Bummer. Sucks to be young me.
At that time the Federal minimum wage was $2.10. So before the crisis a minimum wage worker could buy about 8-10 gallons per hour ignoring taxes.
At the highest prices in recent memory a couple years ago the Federal minimum wage bought about 2 gallons per hour.
With the recent price cuts gasoline is down to almost 4 gallons per minimum-wage hour.
This would be sometime around 1990 or so, and the price tended to hover a little above $1, with $1.04 up to maybe $1.15 being common. When the price dipped to 97 or 98 cents around 1998 or so, that was considered quite something.