The Germans of Fitzrovia
Part of the Marylebone district of the West End (often
called East Marylebone), the area known historically as Fitzrovia was once the
stamping-ground of a sizeable German contingent – economic migrants who came to
work in catering, tailoring etc. and then decided to make their home in London.
Named after the Fitzroy family, Dukes of
Grafton, who owned much of the land on which it was built
in the 18th
century, the district of Fitzrovia had more than its fair share of poverty. But
it was also close enough to the affluent
West End to attract skilled workers to its restaurants, shops and hotels. Many
of these were immigrants from Italy, Switzerland, France and – most notably -
Germany. There was also a thriving Jewish population.
With rents relatively low, the mid-19th
century saw the establishment of a sizeable working-class community around
Goodge Street and Mortimer Street, principally because of their proximity to
the big West End houses that these German tradespeople served. At one time, so
many German businesses were clustered around Fitzrovia that Charlotte Street –
the beating heart of the district then, as now - became known as ‘Charlottenstrasse’.
By 1913, of the 138 businesses listed for the area, at least 40 had German
names. There were butchers, bakers and provision dealers specialising in German
specialities, as well as more than a few restaurants offering
German and
Austrian cuisine. The most famous of
these was undoubtedly Schmidt’s at 41 Charlotte
Schmidt's deli Charlotte St 1901 |
Street which continued trading
right up to the 1970s.
In 1911, about ten per cent of waiters and
waitresses in catering jobs in London were German. German waiters had various
advantages compared to their British counterparts. They had usually had formal
training, either as an apprentice or by attending one of the Fachschulen für Gastwirtschaftswesen (hospitality
colleges), whose curriculum included subjects such as service, menu
organisation, geography, English and French, and book-keeping. They would also
often accept lower wages to obtain experience. An article in the London Hotel
and Restaurant Employees Gazette of 1890 describes how German and Swiss hotel
owners sent their sons to foreign countries “to
pick up as many languages as possible and to learn their profession from the
very lowest rungs of the social ladder”. British establishments also offered
higher wages and shorter hours than back home.
The Germans’ work was
highly regarded, as evidenced by this report by the English National Council: “It would be impossible to speak too highly
of the work carried on by our German brethren. Their work is thoroughly well
organized, their members are keenly interested in the welfare of their
compatriots, their meetings are attractive and well attended, while the value
of the effort put forth to benefit young Germans employed as waiters, bakers,
etc. cannot be over- estimated”.
German waiters established a number of
societies in Britain from the end of the nineteenth century. A Kellnerheim (Christian Home
for Waiters), the first of its kind, was opened in 1892 by George Williams at
44 Clipstone Street. It had limited accommodation, but offered a very important
employment service. The waiters who met at the Kellnerheim went
on to found a Christian Association for Foreign Waiters in 1895. In 1904, the
Association opened a new “Christian Home for Waiters” at 48 Charlotte Street.
The Fitzroy Tavern Charlotte |
Originally built in
1883 as the Fitzroy Coffee House, the Fitzroy Tavern at 16 Charlotte Street (so
named since 1919) first became a pub in 1887 when it was known as ‘The Hundred
Marks’ in acknowledgement of the
sizeable German population at that time.
For those who could afford it, there were also
German clubs and societies, particularly around Charlotte Street and Fitzroy
Street, for sports and gymnastics, cycling, dancing, concerts, drama, dining,
games, English lessons and technical training.
There were also several German bookshops,
including one run by George Thimm in the West End
and this one (right) in
Charlotte Street. The Germans also had their own newspapers, including the Londoner Generalanzeiger (from 1889) and
the Londoner Zeitung (which started
as the Hermann in 1858). Several of
these papers were still in existence right up until the outbreak of World War One.
Schauer's German bookshop Charlotte St |
Herman Ze German Charlotte St |
Today, Fitzrovia has
all but lost its German character, although Herman Ze German, located just a
few doors from where Schmidt’s restaurant and deli used to be on Charlotte
Street, proudly keeps the flag flying with its range of authentic Black Forest
sausages!
References:
Author’s blogpost ‘London’s German Community in the 19th
century’ at: https://londonmad.blogspot.com/2016/01/welcome-to-my-new-blog-short-pieces-on.html
Germans in
Britain since 1500 ed. Panikos Panayi (1996)