21Oct2009
Filed under: Coffee Companies, History Of Coffee
Author: About Coffee[s] Staff
1970’s
The first Starbucks opens. The name comes from Herman Melville’s Moby Dick, a classic American novel about the 19th century whaling industry. The seafaring name seems appropriate for a store that imports the world’s finest coffees to the cold, thirsty people from there store in Seattle’s historic Pike Place Market.
1980’s
Howard Schultz joins Starbucks in 1982. While on a business trip in Italy, he visits Milan’s famous espresso bars. Impressed with their popularity and culture, he sees their potential in Seattle. He’s right – after trying lattes and mochas, Seattle quickly becomes coffee-crazy.
1990’s
The demand for great coffee allows
Starbucks to expand beyond Seattle, first to the rest of the United States, then further a field. After becoming one of the first companies to offer stock options to its part-time employees,
Starbucks becomes a publicly traded company.
2000’s
The Starbucks phenomenon continues. At the time of writing, Starbucks has more than 15,000 locations across the globe.
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