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''Photo: San Francisco Museum and Historical Society'' | ''Photo: San Francisco Museum and Historical Society'' | ||
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'''Hills Bros. exhibit at the [[PPIE: A Festival of Empire Wrapped in Technological Hubris|Panama-Pacific International Exposition]], 1915.''' | |||
''Photo: SanFranciscoMemories.com'' | |||
Unfinished History
courtesy Northern California Coalition on Immigrant Rights
Hills Brothers Coffee, 1940.
Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library
Hills Brothers after conversion to offices, c. 2003.
Photo: Chris Carlsson
"Office, Factory and Selling Force Hills Bros. 1882"
Photo: San Francisco Museum and Historical Society
Hills Bros. exhibit at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition, 1915.
Photo: SanFranciscoMemories.com
"Hills Bros. Building, San Francisco, Date: Dec. 15, 1924"
Photo: San Francisco Museum and Historical Society
The former Hills Brothers Coffee Building on the Embarcadero at Folsom, mid-1990s.
Photo: Chris Carlsson
Embarcadero and Folsom: One of main industries that sprung up early in SOMA was the coffee industry. Starting in the late 19th century, San Francisco had become the largest west coast coffee provider by the 1920s, including companies like Hills Bros, Folgers, and MJB. This industry provided the first link between San Francisco and Central America, where the coffee was grown. Following the industry, Central American laborers came to San Francisco in the early 20th century to work in processing plants and canneries. This explains San Francisco's unique connection to Central America, when most other California cities are historically predominantly Mexican. Most people think that Central Americans first came to San Francisco in the 1960s to 1980s, with the wars in Nicaragua and El Salvador, but many chose to come here because they already had family connections and community links going back to the early part of this century.
The Hills Brothers Factory has since been converted to offices, condominiums and a microbrewery catering to the new upscale South Beach professional clientele.
Hills Brothers coffee being unloaded from freighter on San Francisco shore, mid-20th century.
Photo: Online Archive of California
Folgers Coffee advertising on side of their building at Main and Howard, 1938.
Photo: courtesy OpenSFHistory.org, wnp67.0462
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"Behind the Cup," a self-promotional 16 minute silent film made in the 1930s by Hills Bros. Coffee company, showing the work done in El Salvador to produce the famous "Red Can" product that came to dominate coffee and mass-marketing in mid-century U.S. life.
Video: Prelinger Archive