Telephone:
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+1 415-986-2707
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Website:
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Address:
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175 Sutter St, San Francisco, CA, 94104
b/t Kearny St & Lick Pl
Financial District
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Nearby public transportation stops & stations:
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630 ftMontgomery Street
710 ftBig Bus Tours Stop 17, China Town
0.3 miBig Bus Tours Stop 5, Union Square South
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Local time (San Francisco) | 19:40 Saturday, 28 June 2025 |
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Specialties
John Walker & Company is the best source for top shelf wine, spirits, and liquor. Whether it’s Cabernet Sauvignon, Liqueurs, Single Malts or Tequila, John Walker and Company is sure to carry what you’re looking for!
Come by our location at 175 Sutter Street, downtown San Francisco… or if you’re pressed for time or live outside the city, we would be more than happy to take your order over the phone and deliver to you. We always offer complimentary gift wrapping, and ship to most states and countries.
History
Established in 1933.
Founded in 1933 and located in the heart of San Francisco’s financial district, John Walker & Company is part of San Francisco’s heritage and tradition. For nearly seventy years, our wine and spirits store had been regarded as the premier shop to purchase hard to find wines and spirits of the highest quality. The John Walker & Company image and reputation was built upon offering customers the highest quality products with personalized, knowledgeable service and today, that custom continues. A trusted and well-respected company, customers continue to come back to John Walker & Company year after year, event after event.
Meet the Business Owner
Mike H.
Business Owner
In early December 1933, when Prohibition was repealed, a company named Waldorf Liquors was opened by three gentlemen: John Walker, Fred Foster and Edward Timothy Hogan. The name, Waldorf, taken from the New York hotel, The Waldorf Astoria, represented style, class, and elegance. Did we forget to mention ‘bootlegging’? Well, where do you think all the alcohol came from so quickly? Yes we were some bad boys. Considering we were supplying speakeasies that were frequented by city and government officials and the idea of Prohibition was considered archaic at the time (similar to the shipping restrictions now imposed by some states), we were definitely in the majority. There we mentioned it. In the early forties, Fred Foster left and opened his own store in San Francisco, John Walker retired in the early fifties. That left Tim Hogan, John Hogan and Charles Dilling, John Walker’s nephew. Today I run the store, and am the third generation to do so.