Hamodava
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Company type | Private limited liability company |
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Industry | Coffee Importer and Roaster |
Founded | Melbourne, 1897 |
Founder | Herbert Booth |
Headquarters |
The Hamodava Coffee Company is a beverage manufacturer based in Auckland, New Zealand. Hamodava distribute exclusively Fair Trade and Organic certified products. Salvation Army officer Herbert Booth started the business in Melbourne, Australia in 1897[1] and it ran successfully until 1929. Hamodava was relaunched in September 2016, with the company's operations being moved to Auckland.
History
Herbert Henry Howard Booth a Salvation Army officer, and son of its founder William Booth, was appointed to the command of the organisations operations in Australia and New Zealand. H Booth founded the Hamodava Tea Company in 1897 along with Bundaberg native Ashley Lamb as a means to provide funds to support the work of The Salvation Army. Lamb sourced tea from Sri Lanka, and blended and packed the product for retail in Melbourne. With the success of the original product, Hamodava also introduced both a cocoa and a coffee product to the line two years later.[2] The Hamodava Tea Company continued strong trading up until 1929 when international tea prices collapsed,[3] and with the onset of the great depression the company was disbanded. The name Hamodava comes from the Signhalese word for 'army'.[citation needed]
Hamodava is notable for its role in pioneering ethical and fair trade practices. The company not only sought to pay a fair price to the farmers who grew the produce, but also developed a scheme by which the farmers could make payments towards purchasing plantations from The Salvation Army.[4]
In September 2016 The Salvation Army relaunched Hamodava.[citation needed]
Hamodava Café
The Hamodava Cafe, is situated on Bourke Street in Melbourne, Australia. The cafe operates out of a heritage building that once housed the original company in the late 1800s. It is a community centre providing breakfast and lunch, as well as support to people from all walks of life, especially those living on the margins of society.[5]
References
- ^ "A New Tea—Introduced by the Salvation Army". Darling Downs Gazette. 15 January 1898.
- ^ THQ, The Salvation Army Australia Eastern Territory. "Tea for transformation » others.org.au/". others.org.au. Retrieved 12 May 2017.
- ^ "The History of the International Tea Market, 1850–1945". eh.net. Retrieved 12 May 2017.
- ^ "The social cup". www.salvationarmy.org.nz. 3 November 2016. Retrieved 12 May 2017.
- ^ Army, Salvation. "Hamodava Cafe". The Salvation Army. Retrieved 12 May 2017.
External links
- Food manufacturers of Australia
- Food manufacturers of New Zealand
- Food and drink companies based in Auckland
- Food and drink companies based in Melbourne
- Food and drink companies established in 1897
- New Zealand brands
- Manufacturing companies based in Auckland
- Manufacturing companies based in Melbourne
- Australian companies established in 1897
- New Zealand companies established in 2016