From a Chicago Tribune Editorial
Starbucks went into business 40 years ago Wednesday, and coffee drinking hasn't been the same.
The Seattle-based innovator made the "small" into the "tall," the clerk into the barista and the complex order into performance art and punch line -- shot-of-this, skinny-that, 180-degrees, please.
It even went global, winning converts in the tea-drinking strongholds of Japan and Britain. China's next.
What Starbucks didn't do, however, is make coffee the adult beverage of choice once again. Despite the chain's visibility, coffee consumption in the U.S. peaked decades ago.
Anyone who thinks America is big on the bean today should turn back the clock to 1946: Our soldiers had returned from war, evidently hankering for caffeine. We brewed 46.4 gallons per capita that year, almost double the amount today.
What changed? Soda pop took off, and more recently bottled water. As women joined the workforce, fewer prepared coffee at home. Supermarket sales plunged.
By the time Starbucks got rolling on March 30, 1971, coffee had become a commodity in every sense of the word. Four bucks for a cup of joe? No one would have believed it.