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Timeline

Tom Turner left school at age thirteen to work in a grocery
store to support his family. Ever since this early entry
into the job market, Tom Turner has exhibited a work ethic
that others have marveled. Some years after entering the
grocery business, he wed Mary Polansky. Tom and Mary had
two children, Tom, Jr. and Fred. In 1937 the family of four
moved from Ft. Worth to San Antonio to look for expanded
business opportunities. At the tail end of the Depression,
times were tough and jobs were extremely scarce. Refusing
to give up, Tom obtained work at a gasoline service station
owned by Sigfried Moore. Tom and Sig worked together until
1943, at which time Mr. Moore retired. Seizing a golden
opportunity, Tom purchased the service station and obtained
a $350 loan to lease the property. Tom worked all day at
the station and then drove all night delivering gas in a
tanker truck he purchased. Sixteen to eighteen hour working
days were normal and this dedication to work has stayed
with Mr. Turner throughout his life.

In the late 1940's Mr. Turner bought another store, bringing
his total to two. He recruited his brother to operate the
newly acquired store and enlisted his wife, Mary, to assist
him in operations. His two sons would soon join the ranks
of Tom's employees. By the 1950's the Sigmor Gas Station
chain, a contraction of Sigfried Moore's name, had grown
to a total of twenty retail outlets, each operating within
San Antonio. During this time of expansion, Mr. Turner began
a sort of revolution in the petroleum retail industry. He
began to experiment by offering his customers convenience
type items. In addition, he instituted self-service lanes
where customers could pump their own gas. Anticipating the
emergence of superstores in the 1970's, Tom Turner's innovative
marketing programs are widely regarded as twenty years ahead
of their time. In addition to innovative marketing programs,
Tom succeeded in his real estate ventures. Challenging the
then accepted notion that intersection locations solely
survived in the service station business, Tom began aggressively
acquiring land located mid-street. This unique purchasing
practice allowed him to acquire relatively inexpensive land
on which to build more stations. This formula of rapid expansion
worked with remarkable success. By 1983, Sigmor comprised
575 locations throughout Texas and eighteen surrounding
states. Most amazing, Mr. Turner amassed this remarkable
collection of retail locations while keeping Sigmor a family
owned corporation.

Mr. Turner's business involvement spans not only multiple
decades, but also multiple industries. Over thirty years
ago, Mr. Turner and long-term colleague, Arch Kelly, started
Mission Petroleum Carriers. Today Mission is still a TETCO
company and consists of a headquarters office in Houston,
TX, and twenty terminal locations throughout the United
States. With Mr. Kelly still at Mission's helm, the company
continues to grow in size and profits year after year. In
the 1970's, Mr. Turner owned Industrial Lubricants Co.,
a huge warehouse facility that burned down in the 1970's.
It was immediately rebuilt and became a shipping and storage
warehouse for petroleum-based lubricants. In 1971, Mr. Turner
purchased Gensco, a national supplier of industrial-grade
pipe. He would later use pipe manufactured here to construct
a 70 mile pipeline between his 240,000 barrel bulk storage
depot in Corpus Christi, TX, and his 50,000 bpd refinery
in Three Rivers, Texas. Mr. Turner's business involvement
branches into the food service, paving, industrial sign
silk-screening, drilling, construction, banking, radio,
semi-professional sports (as former owner of the San Antonio
Dodgers minor league team), truck bumper manufacturing and
real estate industries. He even built what is still regarded
as one of the most elegant country clubs in Texas, The Club
at Sonterra.

TETCO, Inc. currently consists of TETCO Stores LP, Mission
Petroleum Carriers and V.K. Knowlton Paving Contractors.
TETCO Stores is the largest corporation in the TETCO family
and is expanding at lightning speed. During the latter part
of 1999, TETCO entered into a joint venture with Mobil Corporation.
The venture included approximately 320 salary operated and
dealer related outlets. In December, 1999, Exxon and Mobil
merged, at which time the Federal Trade Commission mandated
Mobil to divest their joint venture interest with TETCO.
Consequently, in March, 2000, TETCO purchased Mobil's joint
venture interest giving TETCO 100% ownership in TETCO Stores,
LP. Within a short period, TETCO has regained a major presence
in the Texas market reminiscent of the Sigmor days. Please
click this Store Locator link to visit the store
locator and find a TETCO Stores location that's convenient
to you.
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