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Coca-Cola History
Coca-Cola began it's existance in a three-legged brass pot in the backyard of
John S. Pemberton on May 8, 1886. Pemberton was a pharmacist trying to create a new
headache tonic.
Pemberton took his creation to the now famous Jacob's
Pharmacy (pictured above), about 2 blocks from his home. There the syrup was mixed with
cold tap water and sold to ailing customers for 5 cents. As the story goes, a customer in
great pain came in and ordered the syrup and the soda jerk accidentally mixed it with
carbonated water instead of regular tap water. The customer loved the new drink, declaring
it "Delicious and Refreshing!"
Frank Robinson, Pemberton's partner and bookkeeper, suggested the name "Coca-Cola", taking each part of the name from a key ingredient in the product and proclaiming that the two C's would look good in advertising. Mr. Robinson penned "Coca-Cola" in the unique flowing script that is now famous worldwide!
In 1886, sales of Coca-Cola averaged 9 drinks per day. That first year, Pemberton sold only 25 gallons of syrup. For his efforts, Pemberton grossed $50.00 and spent $73.96 on advertising!
As John Pemberton's health grew worse, he sold the company off. Asa Candler took sole ownership of the company by 1891 for a mere $2,300.00!!! (that included all rights, including his initial investment!)
In 1894, Coca-Cola was first
bottled by Joseph Biedenharn, owner of the Biedenharn Candy Company of Vicksburg,
Mississippi. Candler believed that the bottling idea was crazy and that people would never
go for it! As the popularity of Coca-Cola increased, many imitators came onto the scene,
offering products such as "Koca-Kola", so the company decided that they needed a
bottle that would be easily recognizable so as not to be confused with any other. The Root
Glass Company of Terre Haute, Indiana designed the now famous "contour bottle"
or "hobbleskirt". This bottle design was first patented in 1915 and then again
December 25, 1923.
In the year 1928, bottle sales first surpassed
fountain sales, proving that the bottling idea had been a great success!
Asa Candler's merchandising flair helped expand the company to every state and territory by 1919. In that year, Candler (who then went on to become mayor of Atlanta, Georgia!) sold the company to Ernest Woodruff and a group of investors for $25 million and in 1923 Robert Woodruff (Ernest's eldest son) became president of the company. Robert Woodruff's more than six decades of leadership took the business to unrivaled heights of commercial success, making Coca-Cola an institution the world over!
At the beginning of WWII,
Robert Woodruff issued an order to "see to it that every man in uniform gets a bottle
of Coca-Cola for 5 cents wherever he is and whatever it costs the company!"
In 1943, during World War II, Eisenhower sent a
telegram requesting 10 additional Coca-Cola bottling plants overseas for our troops. At
the beginning of the war, Coke was bottled in 44 countries. At the close of the war, 64
additional bottling plants had been established abroad. The presence of Coca-Cola did more
than lift the morale of the troops...it gave many local people in those countries their
first taste of Coca-Cola, paving the way for unprecedented worldwide sales after the war!
The cover page of the May 15, 1950 issue of Time magazine features a Coca-Cola advertisement. It was the first time that a consumer product had been featured on their cover. That same issue also contained a detailed story about Coca-Cola's extensive distribution and franchising system.
In 1981, Robert Goizueta became president of Coca-Cola and soon became one of the most successful businessmen in the world. Mr. Goizueta had come to America from Cuba with little more than a suitcase.
» Slogans
| 1886 | Drink Coca-Cola |
| 1904 | Delicious And Refreshing |
| 1905 | Coca-Cola Revives And Sustains |
| 1906 | The Great National Temperance Drink |
| 1917 | Three Million A Day |
| 1922 | Thirst Knows No Season |
| 1925 | Six Million A Day |
| 1927 | Around The Corner From Everywhere |
| 1929 | The Pause That Refreshes |
| 1932 | Ice-Cold Sunshine |
| 1938 | The Best Friend Thirst Ever Had |
| 1939 | Coca-Cola Goes Along |
| 1942 | Wherever You Are, Whatever You Do, Wherever You May Be, When You Think Of Refreshment, Think Of Ice-Cold Coca-Cola |
| 1942 | The Only Thing Like Coca-Cola Is Coca-Cola Itself. It's The Real Thing. |
| 1948 | Where There's Coke, There's Hospitality |
| 1949 | Coca-Cola...Along The Highway To Anywhere |
| 1952 | What You Want Is A Coke |
| 1956 | Coca-Cola...Making Good Things Taste Better |
| 1957 | Sign Of Good Taste |
| 1958 | The Cold, Crisp Taste Of Coke |
| 1959 | Be Really Refreshed |
| 1963 | Things Go Better With Coke |
| 1970 | It's The Real Thing |
| 1971 | I'd Like To Buy The World A Coke |
| 1975 | Look Up America |
| 1976 | Coke Adds Life |
| 1979 | Have A Coke And A Smile |
| 1982 | Coke Is It! |
| 1985 | We've Got A Taste For You (Coca-Cola And Coca-Cola classic) America's Real Choice |
| 1986 | Catch The Wave (Coca-Cola) Red White & You (Coca-Cola classic) |
| 1989 | Can't Beat The Feeling |
| 1990 | Can't Beat The Real Thing |
| 1993 Nowadays |
Always Coca-Cola |
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