Vancouver History: Nabob
byWhile it’s not a brand most associate with our city specifically, yesterday Nabob coffee celebrated its 115th anniversary in Vancouver, where it originally began.
Founded in Gastown in 1896 by Robert Kelly and Frank Douglas, it was located at 123 then 375 Water Street in what we know as The Landing building.
The company roasted and blended coffee beans for distribution in Western Canada and also included teas and spices in their original product lineup.
Nabob was very involved in city events whether by handing out samples, sponsoring afternoon teas and performances at The Orpheum, and a radio program that was broadcast nationally featuring the “Nabobettes”.
From VancouverHistory.ca Beryl Boden sang with the band for a while, then left for New York. She was succeeded in 1950 by Lorraine McAllister, who performed with Dal’s band for almost 15 years and, in 1951, became Mrs. Dal Richards. “Lorraine sang with the Nabobettes,” Dal recalls. They were the vocal group on Nabob’s Harmony House, an Orpheum fixture for 11 years, and heard from coast to coast on CBC Radio. Also heard every week for many years and more than 2,000 programs on the national network was Dal’s own show from the Panorama Roof.
To mark its anniversary and continue to support its hometown, Nabob donated $10,000 to the Vancouver Board of Trade’s Spirt of Vancouver initiative yesterday. The Spirit of Vancouver is a not-for-profit organization mandated to develop, support, and promote events, organizations, and individuals that are making Vancouver a better place to live, work, play, invest, and visit.
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Wow, I had no idea that Nabob was a Vancouver company, nor that it was so involved in the community in years past. Thanks for this, Rebecca.
Rebecca, thank you for your article on Nabob. As a young’un, I remembered watching local tv-adverts for Nabob products.
I had no idea either that Nabob started in Vancouver! Lookit, I learned something new!
I had absolutely no idea Nabob began in Vancouver, and I thought I was well-versed in Vancouver history. Wow! What I find totally fascinating is seeing all those old photos too… especially of the Landing Building (which looks identical to how it currently stands) and 1106 Mainland (next door to where I work). Very few buildings from that era are left standing today and yet, there they they are, almost identical, housing Nabob Coffee. Who knew?