Simpson's-in-the-Strand is
one of London
's oldest
traditional English restaurants. Situated in the Strand
, it is part of the Savoy Buildings, which also
contain one of the world's most famous hotels, the Savoy
.
After a modest start as a smoking room and then a coffee house,
Simpson's achieved a dual fame, for its traditional English food,
particularly roast meats, and also as the most important venue in
Britain for
chess in the nineteenth century.
Chess ceased to be a feature after Simpson's was bought by the
Savoy Hotel group of companies at the end of the century, but as a
purveyor of traditional English food Simpson's has remained a
celebrated dining venue throughout the twentieth century and into
the twenty-first.
Early development
An earlier building on the site was the Fountain Tavern, home to
the celebrated literary group
Kit-Cat
Club, but this was replaced by Samuel Reiss's Grand Cigar Divan
which opened in 1828. The establishment soon developed as a coffee
house, where gentlemen smoked cigars with their coffee, browsed
over the daily journals and newspapers, indulged in lengthy
conversations about the politics of the day and played
chess, sitting on comfortable divans or sofas. Regular
visitors would pay one
guinea
a year for the use of the facilities and cups of coffee. The daily
entrance fee for others was six pence or one shilling and six pence
with coffee and a cigar.
Chess matches were played against other coffee houses in the town,
with top-hatted runners carrying the news of each move. The Grand
Cigar Divan soon became recognised as the home of chess in England.
Today, one of Simpson's original chess sets is displayed in the
Bishop's Room.
In 1848, Reiss joined forces with the caterer John Simpson (1808 or
09–1864) to expand the premises, renaming it "Simpson's Grand Divan
Tavern". It was soon established as one of the top London
restaurants, becoming an established attraction with patrons
including
Charles Dickens,
William Gladstone, and
Benjamin Disraeli. Simpson introduced the
practice of wheeling large joints of meat on silver dinner trolleys
to each table and carving them in front of guests – a custom that
still prevails today. The establishment flourished: in the 1851
census, the Cigar Divan's premises were home to the tavern keeper,
the manager, and 21 staff. The restaurant was, according to the
Baedeker guide for 1866, a "large
well-appointed establishment".
Shortly before his death in 1864, John Simpson sold the restaurant
to Edmund William Cathie, and in 1865 the business was floated as a
limited company. A prospectus was
issued for "Simpson's (Ltd)" with capital of £100,000 to purchase
and extend the Divan Tavern.
The prospectus stressed the great increase in
trade caused by the opening of Charing Cross
station nearby, and that Cathie would remain as
manager. He employed the British Master Cook, Thomas Davey,
who rose through the ranks to head his kitchens. Davey insisted on
the thorough and consistent Britishness of Simpson's. He even
replaced the word "menu" with "Bill of Fare".
In 1898
Richard D'Oyly Carte,
proprietor of the Savoy
Hotel
, acquired Simpson's. Carte died in 1901, and
his son
Rupert D'Oyly Carte took
over the business from 1903, in which year Simpsons was closed for
redevelopment. All the old furniture and fittings were sold off,
including the largest solid mahogany table in existence, 265
chairs, and 60 other mahogany dining tables. The restaurant
reopened in 1904 under the name it bears today,
Simpson's-in-the-Strand, Grand Divan Tavern.
20th century to WWII
Though the premises were updated under the new management, cooking
methods remained traditional. In an article in
The Times in 1905, details were given of the
Simpson's method of cooking beef. "A large open fire is absolutely
indispensable, and it must be sufficiently large for every portion
of the joint to face the centre or 'red' fire, which will give a
steady and ascertained heat during the whole time the joint is
revolving and being cooked ... basting must be continuously
done.... Not more than one minute should elapse from the time the
joint is taken from the spit until it appears at table."
In 1914 the death of the head chef at Simpson's was a sufficiently
noteworthy event that
The Times featured the news under
the headline "Thomas Davey and his culinary patriotism". The
obituary noted that Davey, who died in harness aged 72, had
commanded a brigade of 100 men, and that under his supervision
1,400 pounds of English meat, 300 pounds of turbot, 100 pounds of
Scotch salmon, and two wagonsful of vegetables were on average
prepared for the table every day.
World War I did not at first affect
Simpson's supplies, though manpower was scarce. In 1915,
P.G. Wodehouse
wrote:
- Simpson's in the Strand, is unique. Here, if he wishes, the
Briton may, for the small sum of half a dollar, stupefy himself
with food. The God of Fatted Plenty has the place under his
protection. Its keynote is solid comfort. It is a pleasant,
soothing, hearty place – a restful temple of food. No strident
orchestra forces the diner to bolt beef in ragtime. No long central aisle distracts his
attention with its stream of new arrivals. There he sits, alone
with his food, while white-robed priests, wheeling their smoking
trucks, move to and fro, ever ready with fresh supplies.
Later, however, supplies were rationed. By 1917 all restaurants
except the most basic kind were obliged to have a completely
meat-free menu one day a week, though Simpson's still offered
luxurious fish, including salmon, sole and turbot.
The inter-war years saw another high period for Simpson's. Thirty
years later the elderly
George
Lyttelton reminisced, "Did you never know the agonising choice
put before you in the pre-war Simpson’s – saddle of mutton or beef
... both perfect of their kind?" It is illustrative of the
continuing high profile of the establishment that the death of its
long-serving doorman was covered in the press: "It is estimated
that 'Old Matt' opened the doors of over 2,000,000 private cars,
taxicabs, and – in Edwardian days – hansom cabs which drew up
outside Simpson's." The head chef of this period was A. W.
Willis.
Early in
1939, before the outbreak of World War
II, the Savoy Group, now under Rupert D'Oyly Carte, proposed to open a
sister restaurant of Simpson's, near Leicester Square
, but this took many years to come to
fruition. During the war Simpson's was severely hit by the
shortage of butchers' meat, their celebrated sirloins of beef and
saddles of mutton disappearing from the trolleys, not to be seen
again in their full glory until long after the end of the war, as
Britain remained on rations until 1954. Partial relief came with an
agreement with Cameron of Lochiel to supply his venison from
Scotland, as well as herrings for smoking. Simpson's, like all
luxury restaurants, was included in the wartime rule imposing a
five shilling limit on the price of a restaurant meal.
After WWII
After the war, Simpson's, like the rest of the Savoy Group, was hit
by a strike of its employees in support of a waiter dismissed from
the Savoy Hotel. The matter was judged so serious that the
government set up a court of inquiry. After the resolution of that
dispute, the next major development in the history of the
restaurant was the resuscitation of the pre-war plan to open a
sister establishment on the site of Stone's Chop House near
Leicester Square. In 1959, Simpson's lost another notable member of
its staff. Frederick William Heck died on his way home, having
consumed a heavy luncheon, and having completed 55 years’ service,
40 years as manager. Ralph R. Smythe, Heck’s assistant since 1955,
was appointed manager. In 1963, the Savoy group finally achieved
its aim from 1939 of opening a second Simpson's, at the revived
Stone's Chop House.
When the
first Michelin Guide to England was
published in 1974, no UK restaurant was judged worthy of the
maximum three stars, or even two, but Simpson's was one of nine
London restaurants, including Le Gavroche
, awarded a star.
In 1978, Simpson's celebrated its 150th anniversary with a luncheon
consisting of all the items from the earliest recorded menu,
starting with turtle soup, going on with roast sirloin of beef and
saddle of mutton and ending with boiled syrup roll. The next year,
mutton had to be dropped from the menu, replaced by lamb because
procuring top quality mutton was increasingly difficult, and the
meat was no longer fashionable. In 1982, after a thirty-year
absence, rabbit was restored to the menu; it was served in a cream
and mushroom sauce.
In 1994, Simpson's began serving breakfasts for the first time. A
light menu was available, but the emphasis was on hearty
traditional English breakfasts. The most substantial offering was,
and is, "The Ten Deadly Sins", consisting of Cumberland sausage,
scrambled egg, streaky and back bacon, black pudding, fried
mushrooms, baked tomato, kidney, fried bread, bubble & squeak
and baked beans.
Formerly a bastion of old-boy traditions, Simpson's has dropped its
rule forbidding women to use the panelled street-level dining-room
at lunchtime. Before 1984, ladies were asked to use the dining room
in the floor above, which was specially decorated in pastel
colours. Also on the first floor is the richly-decorated
late-
Victorian banqueting room, which
can comfortably seat more than 100 people. Another banqueting room
on the lower ground floor is in a more modern 1930s style. There
are also two cocktail bars, the Knight's Bar on the first floor, a
popular
Art Deco-styled
piano cocktail bar, and a bar in The Bishop's
Room, which is now only used for functions.
The Savoy Group was purchased in 1998 by a private equity house,
Blackstone Group, and, after
further changes of ownership, the Savoy Hotel and Simpson's were
split off from the rest of the group in 2005 and run by
Fairmont Hotels and Resorts. As
at February 2007, Simpson's was managed by Jeremy Hopkins, and the
Master Cook was Paul Muddiman.
Simpson's and chess
Just as
Wimbledon
is considered the home of tennis and Lord's
the home of cricket, Simpson's can justifiably
claim the equivalent title for chess. Almost all the top
players of the 19th century played there at some stage, including
Wilhelm Steinitz,
Paul Morphy,
Emmanuel
Lasker,
Johannes Zukertort
(who had a fatal stroke while playing there), and
Siegbert Tarrasch. It was in Simpson's in
1851 that one of the world's great games, the famous "
Immortal Game", was played between
Adolf Anderssen and
Lionel Kieseritzky. It also hosted the
great tournaments of 1883 and 1899, and the first ever women's
international in 1897.
When the refurbished Simpson's reopened under its new management in
1904, chess was no longer the principal feature. This alone was
sufficient to shift the centre of the chess world away from London
permanently, with similar clubs in Vienna and Berlin filling its
role. Chess reappeared at Simpson's in 1980, when the finals of the
National Chess Club Championship were held there. In September 2003
a small tournament was held there to celebrate the 175th
anniversary of chess on the site, and named after the unofficial
world champion during the
1840s and 50s,
Howard Staunton. By
2006, the 4th Staunton Memorial was declared the strongest London
all-play-all tournament since 1986, with high calibre
grandmaster such as
Michael Adams,
Ivan
Sokolov and
Jan Timman competing. The
5th Staunton Memorial in 2007 featured a field of twelve players,
six British and six Dutch.
In film and literature
In film, one of the restaurant's most famous mentions is in
The Guns of
Navarone, when
David Niven's
character leans over his dying companion and tells him that he will
recover in no time, and they will return to London and go straight
to Simpson's and have roast beef. In
E. M.
Forster's Howards End
, Henry Wilcox is a devotee of
Simpson's. P. G. Wodehouse
devoted several paragraphs of
Something New to the restaurant, and in
his novel
Psmith in the
City, his two heroes dine there: "Psmith waited for Mike
while he changed, and carried him off in a cab to Simpson's, a
restaurant which, as he justly observed, offered two great
advantages, namely, that you need not dress, and, secondly, that
you paid your half-crown, and were then at liberty to eat till you
were helpless, if you felt so disposed, without extra charge."
Simpson's also features in the
Sherlock
Holmes stories. Watson joins Holmes there during the story
"
The Illustrious Client"; the
detective is sitting "looking down at the rushing stream of life in
the Strand".
Notes
- The Savoy Group, history pages
- McConnell, Anita. "Simpson, John (1808/9–1864)", Oxford Dictionary
of National Biography, accessed 25 September 2009
- The Times, 13 February 1903, p. 14
- The Times, 24 April 1905, p. 8
- The Times, 7 April 1914, p.5
- Something New, 1915, Chapter 3. Published in the UK in
the same year as Something Fresh, with slightly revised
text.
- The Times 18 April 1917, p. 5
- Hart-Davis, Rupert (ed), Lyttelton/Hart-Davis
Letters, Volume 3, Letter dated 30 October 1958
- The Times, 3 August 1934, p. 14
- The Times, 12 February 1935, p. 15
- The Times, 1 March 1939, p. 13
- About £10 in 2009 terms: see "Five
Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a UK Pound Amount, 1830 to
Present"
- Baker, Anne Pimlott. "Wontner, Sir Hugh Walter Kingwell (1908–1992)",
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University
Press, 2004, accessed 16 September 2009
- The Times, 8 November 1947, p. 4
- The Times, 7 December 1953, p. 17
- Notes attached to Simpson's breakfast menu, 2008
- The Times, 14 October 1953, p. 16
- The Times, 22 March 1974, p. 4
- The Times, 31 October 1978, p. 4
- The Times, 27 December 1979, p. 8
- The Times, 5 February 1982, p. 12
- The New York Times, 18 March 1994
- Simpson's website breakfast menu
- Wyatt, Petronella. "What a carve-up!", The Daily Mail 9
February 2007, p. 15. The article also notes that another gender
barrier fell in 2007, when Simpson's advertised for their first
female carver.
- Walsh, Dominic. "Savoy Group changes name after deal", The
Times, 25 January 2005
- Bird, "The Nineetenth Century" section
- Golombeck, Harry. "Something special in the Strand", The
Times, 7 June 1980, p. 11
- The Times, 25 May 1904, p. 3: chess was now an
"adjunct to the smoking room"
- The Times 2 June 1980, p. 18
- Howard Staunton tournament, 2003
- 5th Howard Staunton tournament, 2007
- Psmith in the City, Chapter 29
References
- Bird, H E, Chess
History and Reminiscences, London, 1893
- Jackson, Stanley, The Savoy – The Romance of a Great
Hotel, New York, 1964, pps: 38–39, 209. Library of Congress
Catalog Card Number: 63-8604
- Shenk, David, The Immortal Game: A History of Chess,
Doubleday, 2006, ISBN 0385510101
External links