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Hills Brothers Coffee

Hills Bros. Coffee
Jar of Hills Brothers Coffee.jpg
Vintage jar of Hills Bros. coffee with the original "taster" logo
Owner Massimo Zanetti Beverage USA
Country United States
Markets world
Previous owners 1985 - Nestlé
1999 - Sara Lee
Website http://www.hillsbros.com

Hills Bros. Coffee is a maker of packaged coffee in San Francisco.

The company has its origins with the sons of shipbuilder Austin Hills (1823-1905), who was born in Rockland, Maine, and ran a business in California building clipper ships. His three sons were Austin Herbert Hills (1851-1933), Earnest Hills, and Reuben Wilmarth Hills I (1856-1934), although Earnest was involved in the coffee business for only a short time. The coffee business was founded in San Francisco in 1878, with a retail store established in 1882, as Arabian Coffee and Spice Mills.

In 1900, Hills Bros. began packing roast coffee in vacuum sealed cans. They incorporated under the Hills Bros. name in 1906. In 1926 Hills Bros. moved its operations to 2 Harrison Street in San Francisco, a Romanesque revival building on the Embarcadero designed by George W. Kelham that is now a city landmark. The roasting operations once made the surrounding area smell like coffee, according to a Key System "March of Progress" style public service film from 1945 In January 2012, the building had become home to Wharton | San Francisco, a satellite of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. A Wharton sign can be currently seen on the Embarcadero side of the building. Google, Inc and the Mozilla Corporation also have offices on several floors of the building.

A symbol of an Arab drinking coffee called "the taster" was designed by an artist named Briggs in 1906 but was replaced by a new "taster" to represent the original founders in 1990. In 1976, Hills Brothers hired the Italian-American singer Sergio Franchi as their TV spokesperson to introduce several lines of specialty flavors. Noted character actor John Zaremba was the primary commercial spokesperson for Hills Brothers in the 1970s and early 1980s, portraying a fictional coffee bean buyer.

During World War II, the company's metal containers were replaced with glass jars. In 1984 they purchased the name and manufacturing facilities of the Chase & Sanborn Coffee Company.


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