The United States Coffee & Tea Co. — 1911
by Paula Bosse
Coffee, coffee, everywhere, at Elm & Akard… (click for larger image)
by Paula Bosse
Above, a photo from a 1911 ad for the United States Coffee and Tea Company, importers and roasters. The text of the ad:
The above photograph shows a recent importation of the finest green coffees grown. Weight 40.000 pounds — just forty days supply.
A tril will convince you that our fresh Coffees are superior — Five delivery wagons covering the entire city each day insures prompt service.
UNITED STATES COFFEE AND TEA COMPANY
Corner Elm and Akard Streets – Phone Main 703
The company seems to have been founded about 1908 by George W. Wilson and a very young Henry Seeligson. (Click article to see a larger image.)
Greater Dallas Illustrated, 1908
According to a 1912 ad (which rather breathlessly promised: “WE ROAST COFFEE EVERY MINUTE OF THE DAY”), the company was the “largest retail dealers in Coffee, Tea, Spices and Butter in the Southwest.”
The photo at the top shows their building at the northeast corner of Elm and Akard; a few years later they moved down Elm to the northwest corner of Elm and Ervay, just a couple of doors east of the Palace Theater (you can see part of their building behind a photo of the Wilson Building here) — this location was once threatened by a fire which broke out in the bakery owned by Frank A. Carreud:
Dallas Morning News, July 3, 1922
There was a surprising amount of coffee-roasting going on in Dallas in the early decades of the twentieth century. In 1922 the big boys were trying to organize a coffee spot market in Galveston, port to Brazilian coffee and West Indies spices.
The company was bought by H. L. Hunt’s HLH Parade Co. in 1961; Hunt sold it to the Texas Wholesale Grocery Corp. in 1963 when it appears to have ceased operations under the U. S. Coffee and Tea name. Here’s a photo of a company van sometime before then:
And now I have an intense desire for a cup of coffee.
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Sources & Notes
Top photo from an ad which appeared in a Terrell School yearbook.
Bottom photo from the City of Dallas Historic Preservation Flickr collection, here — the undated photo was taken by the city’s staff photographer.
Sources of other images/clippings as noted.
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Copyright © 2018 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.
The only thing in this wonderful picture that is more arresting than the Brush light delivery wagon to the right is that pair of ragamuffins holding up the telephone pole at the left. Very nice indeed.
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[…] photo of the always impressive Wilson Building, this one showing the U. S. Coffee & Tea Co. (at the northwest corner of Elm and Ervay) in the […]
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[…] At the bottom left of the photo is the United States Coffee & Tea Co. (which I wrote about here); in the background at the right is the Praetorian Building on Main; and just left of center is the […]
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I looked this up because I have a bottle of turpentine which was sold from this company. I thought that it was unique for a coffee company to be selling turpentine.
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I found a piggy bank glass in my parents house they are both deceased now. I thought it was so cute. My dad was 90 when he passed last year.
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[…] get a new car you suddenly start seeing that same model everywhere? I’m like that with the U.S. Coffee & Tea Co. — seen right next door to the theater. (See it here, peeping around the Wilson Building in a […]
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