Maxwell House

735 E Bay St, Jacksonville
(904) 632-3400

Recent Reviews

Kevin Craven

A Jacksonville staple for a long time, many years. Nothing like the fresh smell of coffee roasting in the air on a cool crisp morning.

Hassan Abdulalim

It’s not good place for owner operator to pick up and drop trailer please owner operatordon’t come to this place

Gregory Brown

Great service, easy check in and out,,,and unloading was fast..Great

Harry Ghuman

-5 stars rating..Truckers please avoid this placeIt’s been 3 days waiting for dropped Trailer to be loaded.

Randall Hawks

The packs seem to be a lot thiner lately today the coffee was realy week i had to put two packs in to strengthen it up my wife and love to remove the seal and sniff it together so please do not take that experience away by cutting on quality thank you so much we realy love it we have drank it for over 20 years

Mary GRAY

This is Downtown City driving streets are tight and a lot of construction going on use your head when coming into this facility your GPS may tell you one way but because of construction you may not be able to get down that street the truck drivers entrance is on Lafayette Street off of Bay Street. It is extremely tight for parking or dropping your trailer getting in and out don't be embarrassed to ask the yard jockeys to help you out it is extremely tight and small there is no room for more than one big sleeper truck in that area so yard jockeys are the key to keeping that place moving it is small the guards are great the yard jockeys are great it's just a tiny area and oh yeah there's a lot of water everywhereNeed two load locksSlide tandems at gate before enter

THAKURSAAB

I wish I could give them 0 rating, Its been 27 hrs i have dropped my trailer and still not loaded. Security only tells you one thing they will call you when its loaded. I met Another driver waiting for 2 days to get unloaded.

Alek Sander

Great place and service. I came there for the first time and was greeted with respect. You have to be careful not to block the street as there is construction there. Mr. Endgmar the security officer is very pleasant and professional. I will be returning there again. Thak you

Abderr Ait

Not a good place for owner operators, after u drop ur trailer they tell u it may take up to 3 days to be ready ,U can’t check in one day before your appointment

Audrey Brailsford

I worked there for 32 years and now Retired from the company. Best experience ever!

Clyde lowery

I been working there for 36 years,awesome

Edward T.

As I start my weary progress into the trail of tears that will assuredly be the "Golden Years" of my old age, infirmity, and decrepitude, I've had to give up the often dangerous...and pleasurable...addictions of my youth. All that's left for me is...coffee (and overeating, as my expanding waistline will attest, and I'd like to say sex, although "dating" these days feels a little too much like going out on a job interview...so I guess that limits it to coffee and overeating. Sorry... way more TMI than necessary or desired, I know...). My oldest friend...we're the same age...recently lectured me about how, before too much longer, we'll be entering the "death zone"...that hoary stage of life where the frivolities/addictions/pleasures we engaged in in our carefree youth start catching up with us in all too often disastrous ways-- case in point, a former "partying" buddy of mine has recently been diagnosed with cirrhosis, and should be on a list for a liver transplant, but continues to prefer drinking to longevity. Another old friend of mine, a lifelong diabetic, is on the list for a transplant and just went on painful and uncomfortable daily dialysis. When I told him about the former "partying" buddy, he expressed anger, not sympathy. "I'm fighting for my life, and this j*rkoff chooses to drink his away, and I'm supposed to feel sympathy? F*ck him!" Ah, well...I guess I can understand the harshness of his sentiments, although I don't necessarily share them. Anyway...I don't remember when I started drinking coffee; probably at the age I started drinking alcohol (late teens). Probably at the same age I started being plagued with insomnia. Back then, I drank it all day long. Maxwell House at home. Whatever was being served when I was out and about. In the morning, it was the best way to recover from a hangover.In my advancing old age, I limit myself now to 2 cups in the morning (insomnia isn't the problem it used to be when I was younger, but I don't want to push my luck). I often awaken in the mornings in a fog of disorientation and despair. Coffee doesn't work as well as the opioids used to, but it can help brighten my mood, jumpstart whatever mental alertness and cognitive ability I have left, and allow me to attempt bracing myself for the adversities and challenges I'm assuredly going to be facing in the coming hours. It also acts as a surefire laxative (sorry...I know...TMI...).I've never bothered with the "coffee makers" like Keurig that cost over $100. Thanks, but no thanks. I put on the hot water on my stovetop, spoon out the black crystallized powder of Maxwell House into my cup (as an aside, I recently bought a "novelty cup" that has a photo of a smiling Rev. Jim Jones on it, with the words printed underneath, "Drink Up!"), pour the hot water into it, stir (I drink it black), retreat to my bedroom, and try to read a little bit, sipping hot coffee, as I come back to some semblance of sentient life, and awareness.I continue buying Maxwell House, I think, because it's one of the few brands of coffee I can still buy in the grocery store that comes in an easily accessible plastic jar. Do I love the taste? I don't pay attention to the taste. I drink coffee in the same way I used to drink beer. I don't care about the tastes, or the intricacies and "science" of the brewing process. When it came to beer, if it ignited that "glow" that rapidly transformed itself (with the help of Jim Beam) into a rampaging forest fire, I didn't care what it tasted like. If coffee can restore my mood and prepare me to leave my "mancave" for the harsh realities of the outside world, I don't care what it tastes like. I buy Maxwell House because it's accessible and complication free when it comes to making it in those first bleary hours of wakefulness.There's a "large" size available, as well as a smaller one. Lately,

Marianne W.

Maxwell House Coffee For nearly 100 years, until the late 1980s, it was the highest-selling coffee brand in the United States. The company's slogan is "Good to the last drop," which is often incorporated into its logo and is printed on its labels. My family always drank Maxwell House. My Mother perked it in the metal pot on the stove. The smell was so good and the taste was the first coffee introduced to me. It's still one of my favorites. I buy the instant coffee now. I recommend you try it when you get a coupon or catch a sale. Coffee is very expensive these days.

Michael N.

For the coffee connoisseurs among you who can pretend to discern regions and longitude between beans on the tip of your tongue, an old venerable coffee brand like Maxwell House may seem like a slumlord at the opera. However, if you're a fan of iced coffee as I am, this ancient, lowly brew is just fine.After I add Splenda and milk to the mix, any subtlety inherent in the beans has been rendered moot. This mixology truism is the same reason I don't waste Grey Goose in a Bloody Mary when Smirnoff as the suspension medium will do just fine battling with the pepper and Worcestershire sauce. Now owned by Kraft Heinz, Maxwell House is a supermarket brand largely left for dead among the Kenyan Blends and small batch Bolivians but again, under the ice and laboratory sweeteners what does it really matter. I'm off to the opera. Five easy stars.

Angel Danger

Great people, great business.

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