Kardomah Cafés were a chain ofcoffee shops in England, Wales, and a few in Paris, popular from the early 1900s until the 1960s, but now almost defunct. They featured live entertainment provided by string quartets.[1]
The company that created the Kardomah brand began in Pudsey Street,[2] Liverpool in 1844 as the Vey Brothers teadealers and grocers. In 1868 the business was acquired by the newly created Liverpool China and India Tea Company,[3] and a series of brand names was created beginning withMikado. TheKardomah brand of tea was first served at the Liverpool colonial exhibition of 1887,[4] and the brand was later applied to a range of teas, coffees and coffee houses. The parent company was renamed Kardomah Limited in 1938.[5][6] The brand was acquired by theForte Group in 1962,[7] sold toCadbury/Schweppes/Typhoo in 1971, and became part ofPremier Brands some time between 1980 and 1997. The brand still exists, selling items such asinstant coffee andcoffee whitener.
The Kardomah Cafés in London and Manchester were designed bySir Misha Black between 1936 and 1950.[8]
The last remaining Kardomah cafe is in Swansea, South Wales. The originalSwansea branch was at 232 High St, and known as 'The Kardomah Exhibition Cafe & Tea Rooms', moving to the Castle Street in 1908.{The Cambrian, 13th November 1908}[9] The Castle Street cafe was the meeting place ofThe Kardomah Gang, which includedDylan Thomas,[10] and was built on the site of the former Congregational Chapel where Thomas's parents were married in 1903. The cafe was bombed during WW2 (the Blitz of 19 to 21 February 1941) and was later replaced by the present Kardomah Coffee Shop Restaurant in Portland Street[10] which was opened in 1957. It retains its original interior virtually untouched, including Formica tables with a design of coffee beans, sputnik style coat racks, mosaic tiled columns and dark wood panelling. The cafe has been run by the Luporini family since 1970 and remains a beloved Swansea institution.
A branch in the fictional town of Milford is one of the meeting places used by Alec and Laura in the 1945 filmBrief Encounter. It was created on a studio set.[37]
Liverpool's Kardomah Cafe gained popularity for the 1983 song "Kardomah Cafe" by local groupThe Cherry Boys. This branch was also used by the Beatles, and the many Merseybeat groups of the 1960s, who played in the nearby Cavern Club.
^Catherine Hall, Sonya O. Rose,At home with the empire: metropolitan culture and the imperial world, Cambridge University Press, 2006,ISBN0-521-85406-7, p.184
^"Kardomah Limited" share issue announcement with company history,The Times, Monday June 16th 1947, p.7, accessed at The Times Digital Archive 2011-05-14