Life in a 17th Century Coffee Shop
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About this ebook
David Brandon
David Brandon was educated at Manchester University and worked in Adult Education at Further Education Colleges and Universities and later for a major national trade union. Researching and writing since 1997 he has had forty titles published of which he regards the 'flagship' to be a collaborative work published by the National Archives, using their resources to examine the transportation of felons to Australia and other penal colonies. His publications reflect his wide interests which include railways, political and social history, London history, topography, local history and the history of crime.
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Life in a 17th Century Coffee Shop - David Brandon
CHAPTER 1
Introduction
O coffee! Loved and fragrant drink, thou drivest care away . . .
In St Michael’s Alley, a narrow, easy-to-miss and quiet passage off Cornhill in the heart of the bustling City of London, stands the Jamaica Wine House. A plaque on the wall explains that on this site stood the original London coffee house, opened in 1652.
Within the coffee houses of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries a wide range of activities were carried on that had a very important influence on English and international history. The golden age of the coffee house coincided with what can fairly be said to have been an explosion in scientific enquiry and learning. Coffee houses were frequented by such cognoscenti of the arts and sciences as Wren, Dryden, Reynolds, Johnson, Boyle, Swift, Gainsborough, Garrick and Hogarth. The origins of many insurance companies and other businesses in the financial sector can be traced back to men talking to each other in coffee houses. Such was the central role that the coffee houses played in the life of late seventeenth- and eighteenth-century London that gentlemen were often associated more with the coffee houses they frequented than with the homes in which they lived.
Oxford and Cambridge both had coffee houses. Bristol is recorded as having four by 1666, there was at least one at York in 1669 and others in Edinburgh, Glasgow and Dublin. There were also coffee houses in Exeter, Bath, Norwich, Great Yarmouth, Chester, Preston and Warwick. While these were all important provincial towns, given London’s unassailable position as the political, economic, social and cultural focus of England, it was inevitable that the majority of coffee houses were to be found there – and it is those in London with which we will mainly be concerned. It is estimated that London, Westminster and their environs had at least 1,000 coffee houses in 1714. In their early days coffee houses were usually identified by a hanging sign, until in 1762 all such signs were banned. A common theme for the sign was either a coffee pot or the turbaned head of a Turk. Common activities of the coffee house, whether in London or elsewhere, were discussion of the news and the conducting of commerce.
Why did coffee-drinking catch on? How did the commodity arrive in Britain? How did the coffee houses operate and what kind of people patronised them? How did they contribute to economic, social and cultural history? Why did they eventually decline? Above all, what was the ‘coffee house experience’? What sights, sounds and smells were experienced by those who frequented them? How apt was Dr Johnson’s definition of a coffee house as ‘A house of entertainment where coffee is sold, and the guests supplied with newspapers’?
This book attempts to get under the skin of the coffee house. It probes the significance of these comparatively fleeting but highly influential institutions and tries to evoke a sense of the historical period of which they were a part and to which they made such a significant contribution. The last decade has seen a remarkable revival in the UK of establishments given over to the adoration and consumption of the roasted coffee bean in drink form. The arrival of this new generation of ‘coffee houses’ in towns and cities throughout Britain makes it particularly appropriate to go back and take a look at their ancestors.
CHAPTER 2
Early Days
They have in Turkey a drink called coffee made of a berry of the same name, as black as soot, and of a strong scent.
Francis Bacon, 1672
The origins of coffee are confused by a variety of appealing but probably apocryphal legends. The coffee plant bears white, sweet-smelling flowers from which green berries develop. These turn red when ripe. Each berry contains two beans and it is these which are the commercial product of the plant. We know that the coffee plant is almost certainly native to what used to be called Abyssinia, now Ethiopia. There, perhaps accidentally, the locals discovered that the beans of the wild plant, when chewed, helped to sustain their physical and mental spirits during demanding activities in the inhospitable conditions in which they lived and worked. The use of coffee as a drink was first recorded by the revered Arabian philosopher and physician with the Westernised name of Avicenna (980–1037). At that time it seems that the green unroasted beans were simply steeped in boiling water to produce a stimulating and refreshing drink.
The Abyssinians were eventually subjected to raids by Arab slave traders, who picked up the habit of masticating the berries. Finding themselves equally pleased with coffee’s stimulant effects, it is likely that these traders rooted up some of the bushes and took them away. It is thought that the coffee plant was first cultivated in the Yemen, probably as a result of the activities of returning slavers.
Legend has it that the real potential of coffee was discovered by an Arab goatherd who was amazed when the animals in his care, in their typically voracious way, not only consumed some of the leaves of a fairly nondescript nearby bush but then started gambolling about in an unusually frisky manner. As the story