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Carlo Gatti (1817–1878) was a -born British restaurateur in the . He came to in 1847, where he established restaurants and an ice importing business. He is credited with first making available to the general public and he then moved into the business. He returned to Switzerland in 1871, leaving his businesses in the hands of members of his family and he died a millionaire.

Gatti originated in , the main Italian-speaking area of . He was probably born in Marogno, a village within the comune of in the impoverished and sparsely populated , where he also ended his days. He was the youngest of a family of six, and his parents were Stefano and Apollonia.


Success in London
Carlo had moved to from by 1847 at the latest, and initially lived in the Italian community in . At first, he ran a stall selling and . Biography at the London Canal Museum website In 1849, he began to run a café and with partners. They specialised in selling and ice cream. They put a chocolate-making machine in the window to attract business, and took ice for the ice cream from Regent's Canal under a contract with the Regent's Canal Company. Their shop was the first to sell ice cream to the public; previously, ice cream was an expensive treat confined to rich people with access to an ice house.

Gatti exhibited his chocolate-making machine, imported from France, at the in 1851. Also in 1851, Gatti opened a stand in Hungerford Market, near , to sell confectionery and cakes, hot coffee, cold soft drinks and ice cream.,

(1996). 9780140176414, Penguin.
A portion of ice cream was sold for one penny served in a shell, perhaps the origin of the .

Gatti built a large ice warehouse, capable of storing tons of ice in two large ice wells, in the Battlebridge Basin off the Regent's Canal, near King's Cross. He began importing ice from from around 1860, shipping the ice from Norway, up the , then transferring it to canal barges at the Regent's Canal Dock (today the ) and via the canal to his ice warehouse. Starting with a single ice well in 1857, he built a second ice well around 1862, and became the largest ice importer in London. Today the ice warehouse houses the London Canal Museum. He began to run a fleet of delivery carts, supplying ice for domestic .

Hungerford Market was damaged when the adjoining burned down in 1854, but Gatti was insured, and used the proceeds to build a music hall, known as Gatti's, which opened in 1857. He sold the music hall to South Eastern Railway in 1862, and the site became Charing Cross railway station.

With the proceeds from selling his first music hall, Gatti acquired a restaurant in Westminster Bridge Road, opposite the Canterbury Music Hall. He converted the restaurant into a second Gatti's music hall, known as "Gatti's-in-the-Road", in 1865. It later became a cinema. The building was badly damaged in the Second World War, and was demolished in 1950.

In 1867, he acquired a in named "The Arches", under the arches of the elevated railway line leading to Charing Cross station. He opened it as another music hall, known as "Gatti's-in-The-Arches".

Members of his family were involved in his businesses, and he spent most of his time in Switzerland after 1871.


Family
In 1839 Carlo was married to Maria Marioni, by his eldest brother Giacomo, the priest at Castro.Kinross, Felicity. Coffee and Ices, the story of Carlo Gatti in London, privately published, 1991. In 1871 he married a second wife (Marietta Andreazzi, allegedly aged 23).The Historical Dictionary of Switzerland (available in German, French, Italian and Rhaeto-Romanic/Romansh, but not in English)


Death
He died on 8 September 1878. He is buried in Bellinzona (Switzerland), not far from his home valley. Website of Repubblica e Cantone Ticino

According to food writer , 'the ice business that he had set up endured and continued to expand for almost a century'.

His family continued to operate the Charing Cross music hall, known for a period after Gatti's death as the Hungerford or Gatti's Hungerford Palace of Varieties. It became a cinema in 1910, and the Players' Theatre in 1946. Website of the Yale University Art Gallery


See also


External links

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