Maryland Club Coffee
American coffee brand. Documented in the H and H Coffee Factory KB as a directly-cited 1964 competitor in San Antonio / Hill Country retail. Maryland Club has a long history under several corporate owners (the brand traces to Coca-Cola Company’s coffee division at various points and has cycled through additional owners since); for KB purposes, the 1964 attestation is the focus.
The 1964 Fredericksburg attestation
The 27 May 1964 Fredericksburg Standard (p. 3) grocery price block lists three named brands side-by-side at one weekly-ad price point (documented from brands/h-and-h-blend-coffee.md and brands/sam-houston-coffee.md):
| Brand | Format | Price |
|---|---|---|
| H and H Coffee | 1-pound bag | 59¢ |
| Maryland Club Instant Coffee | 10-ounce jar | $1.39 |
| Tide | king-size | 99¢ |
This direct same-ad pricing comparison documents:
- Maryland Club was in active SA-area retail distribution as an instant-coffee product (paper-label jar) in 1964.
- The $1.39 / 10 oz jar price point represents the mid-1960s instant-coffee retail ceiling for non-promotional jar sizes — useful comparand for the (undocumented) Master Chef Instant pricing of the same era.
- The H&H 59¢ / 1-lb bag at the same ad places ground-coffee value-tier H&H alongside instant-jar premium Maryland Club, illustrating the two-product-category competitive landscape of 1964 Hill Country grocery.
Transcription correction context
The Maryland Club entry surfaced during the H and H Instant Coffee hypothesis page work as part of a transcription correction: the 1964 Fredericksburg ad’s “10 ounce jar… $1.39” entry was initially read as ambiguously branded but the source image clearly labels it MARYLAND CLUB, a competitor brand co-listed in the same price cell, not a Hoffmann-Hayman product. The 1964 ad’s H&H entry is the 1-pound bag at 59¢, not the 10-oz jar.
This correction matters because: under the (now disfavored) Hypothesis 2 / 3 framing of the h-and-h-instant-coffee page (parallel-but-undocumented H&H Instant wordmark vs. anticipatory-cataloging stub), a 1964 H&H-branded 10-oz instant jar would have been near-decisive evidence; the Maryland Club identification removes that piece of evidence and leaves Hypothesis 1 (editorial misclassification; the actual H&H instant line was always Master Chef Instant) as the best-supported reading.
Open questions
- Maryland Club’s corporate ownership in 1964. Various sources name Coca-Cola Company, Duncan Foods, and Maryland Club Foods Inc. as historical owners across different eras. The specific 1964 owner (the entity whose product the Fredericksburg ad sold) is undocumented in the KB.
- Other Maryland Club attestations in the SA market. The KB has one 1964 attestation; broader 1950s-1970s SA-newspaper grocery-ad coverage would establish whether Maryland Club was an episodic feature or a persistent shelf competitor for H&H.
- The 10-oz jar format. Maryland Club’s 10-oz jar in 1964 differs from the documented Master Chef Instant 2-oz and 6-oz jar sizes (7 Nov 1957 SA Express ad — see brands/h-and-h-instant-coffee.md). Whether H&H ever packed a 10-oz instant jar to match Maryland Club’s format is the open Hypothesis 2/3 question on the instant-coffee page.
See also
- H and H Instant Coffee — hypothesis page; Maryland Club identification clarified the 1964 ad’s H&H non-instant attribution
- H and H Blend Coffee — the 1964 ad cites H and H Coffee 1-lb bag 59¢
- Sam Houston Coffee — companion SA brand also referencing the 1964 ad
- Maxwell House Coffee — companion national instant-coffee competitor