Hajoca corporate offices moved out of Ardmore after 60 years to a new location in Lafayette Hill, PA. In April, Fredericksburg, TX became the first showroom to operate under the name of FACETS. […]
2016
FACETS – a new, more concise, and retail customer-friendly brand name was conceived for high-end luxury showrooms, with 18 locations initially participating in the rebrand. […]
2000-2015
Hajoca continued to grow through more acquisitions, adding profit centers across the U.S. with the total number at nearly 400 locations. […]
2000
Hajoca purchased LCR-M Corporation’s 52 traditional profit centers across Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Arkansas giving Hajoca a combined total of 257 profit centers. This acquisition provided even greater opportunity to provide outstanding service to customers and suppliers, as well as career and financial opportunities to associates. […]
1981
Hajoca continued to grow through acquisitions and, in this year, the purchase of our own company was finalized. This returned the company to being privately owned, and we began operating with the profit-sharing business model that we still use today. […]
1957
After 99 years in Philadelphia, Hajoca’s general and corporate offices moved to a smaller building in Ardmore, Pennsylvania. […]
1927
By this time, Haines, Jones, and Cadbury had 14 locations from Philadelphia to Florida. The company moved its headquarters and showroom to 3025 Walnut Street in Philadelphia and merged with three well-known companies to officially form Hajoca Corporation, becoming one of the largest Plumbing, Heating, and Industrial supply houses in the United States. […]
1887
The company began using the trade name HAJOCA. The name is derived from the last names of the three visionaries (HAines, JOnes, and CAdbury = HA-JO-CA) who saw a demand for indoor plumbing, a relatively new concept in the 19th century, and vowed to make it easily available. […]
1883-1884
William H. Haines joined the company. William S. Cooper retired. The company name changed to Haines, Jones, and Cadbury. […]
Early 1880s
The company expanded its line of products to include bathtubs, water closets, and lavatories, which led to the opening of the first showroom on Ridge Avenue in Philadelphia. […]