As members of lodges emigrated and settled in New Zealand they were able to establish societies down under, and a meeting was held in Napier in June 1892 to discuss establishing a pharmacy for the benefit of members in the area.
Just four months later sufficient funds had been accrued through debentures issued to lodges and individuals, to establish a UFS Dispensary. It was officially open for business the following February in Emerson St "in the premises lately occupied by Grant and Co and directly opposite N.Williams and Son", according to the first advertisement in Napier's Daily Telegraph newspaper.
It later moved to a site in Hastings St, where the number of chemists grew rapidly in what was considered the main shopping street in Napier.
It moved to the current site as the business centre moved, and it was there on February 3, 1931, that the building was wrecked in the Hawke's Bay Earthquake.
It was reported to have been one of the three pharmacies from which fire swept to engulf much of the inner-city, but reopened in the Tin Town temporary business centre within a few weeks.
A tender was let later in the year for the rebuilding in Emerson St and it opened on April 1, 1932 – just 14 months after the earthquake and one of the fire replacement buildings to be completed.
There was considerable public concern in 1986 over the loss of a period building amid the rapid growth of the Art Deco reputation in Napier, but it re-emerged in a building designed with some recognition of the era, and became the Deco City Amcal Pharmacy.
The Hastings UFS Dispensary was no longer linked in any way with the Napier pharmacy and continues to operate from its site in Heretaunga St East. UFS dispensaries also continue in Blenheim and Invercargill.