Aviation Coffee Company
San Antonio coffee roaster and H&H competitor. Operated at 119 South Medina Street — near the former Hoffmann-Hayman location on North Medina. Owned by A. A. Walker. Destroyed by fire on February 27, 1937.
The 1937 fire
On Saturday, February 27, 1937, a major fire destroyed the Aviation Coffee Company plant at 119 South Medina Street. Key details:
- Loss: $20,000; structure and contents “considered a complete loss”
- Response: Two-alarm call; firemen pulled three box cars to safety
- Conditions: Wind and light rain hindered firefighting efforts
- Cause: Undetermined
The fire eliminated a direct local competitor at a moment when Hoffmann-Hayman was actively expanding output at 601 Delaware Street. November 1937 articles document H&H expansion, suggesting the firm was growing into the market space vacated by Aviation Coffee’s destruction.
Competitive context
Aviation Coffee Company’s name reflects the aviation-themed branding trend of the 1930s — a period when flight was glamorous and brand names borrowed its associations. The Medina Street address placed them on the same commercial corridor as H&H’s own earlier 1912–1922 location at 307 North Medina. The proximity underscores that San Antonio’s wholesale coffee trade was concentrated in the Medina Street wholesale grocery district.
No product documentation, trade advertisements, or employee records for Aviation Coffee Company have been located in the KB research.
Open questions
- When was Aviation Coffee Company founded?
- Was A. A. Walker a sole proprietor or part of a larger enterprise?
- Did the company ever reopen after the 1937 fire?
- What brands did Aviation Coffee sell, and in what geographic territory?
See also
- Hoffmann-Hayman Company
- Aviation Coffee Company Fire (1937) — the event entry
- 307 North Medina Street — H&H’s Medina Street address 1912–c.1922