
Yale Spice Tin, Steinwender-Stoffregen Coffee Co., St. Louis, MO 1915
This is a “Yale Spice” tin from the Steinwender-Stoffregen Coffee and Spice Co. based in St. Louis, MO, 1915.
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Antique advertising for coffee collectibles and tea relics are highly prized. Some of the most popular types of coffee collectibles are antique coffee grinders and mills, percolators and pots, and large general store coffee storage bins with scoops. Other important memorabilia are coffee cans, mugs and cups, signs and tins. Significant brands were Fat Boy, Chase & Sanborn and Luzianne and regional brands such as C.F. Blanke’s Coffee & Spice. In general, the coffee products advertised the company’s name and logo designs.
Storage Bins – Large coffee storage bins displayed in general stores were over two feet wide and two feet tall and held up to 75 pounds of coffee.
Coffee Tins – Coffee tins were used to package the coffee and considered a way to keep the coffee clean in comparison to food offered in bins or barrels when people would use their hands sometimes to scoop it out.
Coffee Pots – The coffee pots, percolators, storage bins and tins were designed to display a company’s brand on the side of their containers. In the early 1900’s, coffee pots were made of tin, aluminum or enamel and were created to boil water or brew coffee.
Percolators – The first percolators were made out of aluminum or metal and placed on the top of a stove then forced water to come up through a tube to run over coffee grounds.
Many collectors are interested in coffee grinders from the 1800’s that were used in the general stores to help break down coffee beans into a more usable form. The coffee grinders were box-types, large floor standing models, wall-mounted or counter-mounted.
Typically, the grinders had a brass bowl with a single or double wheel and a crank to grind the beans into a drawer beneath it. Most were box-shaped but rare ones were round. The company had their logo or unique designs on the sides or top to differentiate their brand.
Elgin National – One well-known brand, Elgin National, featured a brass eagle finial on the top and an eagle with shield decals on the sides. Elgin National is a high demand brand for coffee collectibles.
This is a “Yale Spice” tin from the Steinwender-Stoffregen Coffee and Spice Co. based in St. Louis, MO, 1915.
This is a Monkey Brand Roasted Coffee General Store Bin made of tin from the Steinwender-Stoffregen Coffee and Spice Co. based in St. Louis, MO, circa 1910. The Steinwender-Stoffregen Company was known for their flagship Yale brand of coffee in the early 1900’s. However, the Monkey brand was a top seller also for the company, but paled in comparison to the sales of their Yale brand. The Steinwender-Stoffregen Company won an award as the best coffee at the St. Louis World’s Fair Exposition in 1904.
This is a Yale Gas Roasted Coffee tin from the Steinwender-Stoffregen Coffee and Spice Co. based in St. Louis, MO, 1905.
Featured is a beautiful Uncle Sam’s Coffee General Store Tin Bin from the Thomas Wood and Company Manufacturer based in Boston, MA
Featured is a beautiful tin three pound coffee can from the A.J. Kasper Company for their Turkey Brand of roasted coffee.
Featured is a beautiful tin coffee can from the Thomson & Taylor Spice Company in Chicago, IL. This can carried their Silver Dollar brand of coffee in a 3 pound can. Circa 1900.
A colorful coffee can from the Stone Ordean Wells Coffee Company which was based in Duluth, MN for their Metropolitan Brand of Mocha and Java Coffee.
This is a very unusual three pound coffee can from the St. Louis Coffee and Spice Mills Company based in St. Louis, MO. Circa 1905, this can features an image of the statue of Saint Louis.
This is an antique coffee tin in the shape of a milk pail from the William Schotten Coffee Company in St. Louis, MO, 1910.
Pictured is a early tin coffee can from The Saville, Somes Company at 55 Commercial Street in Boston, MA. This can is for their famous Red Feather brand of coffee.