The Conservation Society of San Antonio (saconservation.org) is a volunteer-led preservation organization founded 1924 — among the earliest community preservation groups in the United States. Headquarters and research library at 1146 South Alamo (Courand House, King William area). Phone (210) 224-6163; general contact conserve@saconservation.org.

For the H and H Coffee Factory project, the Society matters as a preservation network, a research library for building and neighborhood history, a grant and advocacy channel for historic structures, and an event audience (NIOSA, calendar programs, preservation awards) aligned with the 601 Delaware adaptive-reuse program.

Organization and programs

  • Scale: 1,700+ member-volunteers (current website); began with 13 founding women.
  • Scope: Advocacy for reuse of historic structures; Spanish Colonial missions were an early focus; ongoing work on buildings, objects, places, customs, and green space across San Antonio and Texas.
  • Signature fundraiser: A Night in Old San Antonio® (NIOSA) during Fiesta week (since 1948) — site describes it as the largest U.S. preservation celebration and fundraiser.
  • House museums: Yturri-Edmunds House Museum (Society-operated); Villa Finale (National Trust; linked from Society tour pages) — both are operational precedents cited in Coffee Museum planning.
  • Building grants: Annual grants for restoration/rehabilitation of residential or commercial historic structures at least 50 years old; application window typically early August through end September (verify each year on the Society’s Building Grants page).
  • Easements: Conservation Society Foundation holds 14 facade easements plus a permanent loan of a historic sign.
  • Awards: Biennial Historic Preservation Awards (Texas Preservation Hero, Lynn Ford Craftsman, Building Awards).

Research library and archives

The library’s stated mission is to document San Antonio and South Central Texas with emphasis on historic buildings, objects, places, and customs.

Detail Value
Location Basement, Courand House, 1146 S. Alamo (enter from Adams St.)
Hours By appointment only — Mon–Thu mornings and afternoons
Librarian Beth Standifird — bstandifird@saconservation.org
Catalog PastPerfect online
Digital partner Portal to Texas History — Ernst Raba early SA photos; 2025 Rescuing Texas History grant for HemisFair neighborhood digitization

Relevant H&H research uses: house and neighborhood files, historic-building documentation, file indexes, research links/tips, and virtual exhibits (Alamo Plaza, HemisFair, missions, NIOSA).

Public historic-site surveys

The Society publishes two major survey programs (not a general industrial-building register on the public site as of 2026-05-27):

  1. Farm and ranch complexesfarmandranch.omeka.net; 100+ documented sites in Bexar and adjacent counties.
  2. Historic gas stations — ~1,500 station records (pre-1940 core city plus 1940–1970 inside Loop 410); reuse and designation reference.

H&H project touchpoints

Listening tour and outreach

Listed on the Listening Tour — SA History Community target list at medium priority: building context for 601 Delaware, preservation community, year-round events. Talking points for preservation audiences: Depression-era industrial construction (Noonan & Company, George W. Mitchell, 1932), intact factory fabric, Crystalvac roof landmark, embedded structural history.

Funding and programming (future/)

Coffee Museum and 601 Delaware pitch name the Society for fiscal-sponsorship exploration, grant guidance, lecture partnerships, walking-tour bundles, and hosted galas. No Society relationship is documented yet — outreach is planned, not executed.

Primary-source mention

Mrs. Franz Stumpf represented the Conservation Society among speakers at a 1959 San Antonio public-library expansion hearing (see 1959 jail coffee transcript context) — early institutional overlap with city cultural infrastructure, not H&H-specific.

Open questions

  • 601 Delaware in Society files. Is the Delaware Street plant or block documented in library files, surveys, or advocacy history? Gas-station and farm/ranch surveys are explicit online; industrial/commercial coverage needs a librarian query.
  • Industrial or commercial register. Project notes refer to an “industrial heritage register”; the public Historic Site Surveys page (2026-05-27) lists farm/ranch and gas-station programs only — clarify with staff whether a separate commercial/industrial inventory exists offline.
  • Building grant fit. Would 601 Delaware adaptive reuse qualify under the annual building-grant criteria (age, ownership, project type)?
  • NIOSA / event partnership. Practical path for ginger-beer or book sales, lecture slots, or preservation-week programming.

See also

Places

Future

Operations

  • SAPL citizen historian research tools — parallel local research infrastructure