David Long Email

Chief Operating Officer & Head Business Development . Sprague Energy Corp

Current Roles

Employees:
575
Revenue:
$3B
About
Sprague was founded in 1870 by Charles H. Sprague. Before founding the company, Mr. Sprague learned the technology of mining while employed at a coal mining company. Armed with the knowledge of both coal mining and transportation, Mr. Sprague established the Charles H. Sprague Company and got into the energy business as a privately held power company. In the beginning, the company helped to meet the explosive demand for coal, which was being fueled by the industrial age. During World War I, the privately held power company became the major supplier of coal to America's European allies. To facilitate the transportation of millions of tons of coal across the Atlantic, the Sprague Steamship Company was founded. By World War II, the company was operating eleven terminals and a fleet of 27 vessels transporting coal and other products throughout the world. Its role as a worldwide coal supplier was solidified in 1942, when the US Government selected Sprague to manage the wartime coal shipment program. Following the war, an era of prosperity began. An era that saw oil become a major fuel source and component of the energy business. Sprague seized this growth opportunity by entering the oil business and building its first industrial oil terminal adjacent to its Portsmouth coal facility. The Sprague family entered the industrial oil business with a major commitment; building terminals, acquiring tankers, contracting with suppliers, handling the product, and attacking the markets. In 1959, the company expanded its oil marketing activities by entering the distillate oil market. By the late 1960s, the company separated into two operations: coal and oil. This spilt was quickly followed by the sale of its entire coal operation to the Westmoreland Coal Company. Having consolidated its focus on the oil business, the Sprague family sold its interest in the company to Royal Dutch Shell's Asiatic Petroleum subsidiary in 1970. Two years later, Shell sold Sprague to the Axel Johnson, Inc., a member of the Axel Johnson Group of Stockholm, Sweden. That move proved fortuitous because it provided the resources for Sprague Energy to prosper during the energy crises of the 1970s. Spurred by recent oil supply crises, the company came full circle in 1982 when it joined forces once again with Westmoreland Coal Company. Through an exclusive marketing arrangement with Westmoreland, coal again became a major energy component of Sprague Energy's total energy business, and reinforced its position as a major industrial fuel supplier. Supported by a growing network of terminals, Sprague launched a full-time material handling marketing effort in 1986. The following year marked a shift in the company's business from being primarily an industrial fuel distributor to focus on commercial and wholesale fuels as well. To aggressively support this new, broader direction, the company made a number of significant acquisitions. The 1990s saw further expansion into the natural gas marketplace, gasoline wholesaling and terminaling business, as well as entry into the aviation fuel market. In 1999, Sprague moved its corporate offices to a state-of-the-art facility located at Two International Drive, Suite 200, Pease International Tradeport in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Sprague began 2001 by acquiring RAD Energy, a leading fuel distributor servicing metro New York and New Jersey.
Sprague Energy Corp Address
185 International Drive
Portsmouth, NH
United States
Sprague Energy Corp Email

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