81 The Kardomah
Since 1957 the Kardomah café and
coffee house in Swansea ’s
city centre has been prominent at its corner site, 11 Portland Street . It is particularly well-known for its former
pre-war premises which were the meeting place during the 1930s of Swansea ’s talented group
of young writers, artists and musicians, who came to be known as the Kardomah
gang or Kardomah boys.
Kardomah was initially the name
of a brand of tea produced by the Liverpool China and Tea Company in 1887, and
later applied to a range of teas, coffees and coffee houses. From 1929 there were Kardomah cafés in South
Wales in Cardiff and Newport, though Swansea’s was earlier – in late August 1918 the soprano,
musician and composer Morfydd Owen lunched in Swansea’s Kardomah with her
husband Dr Ernest Jones, before the appendix operation at Craig-y-môr in
Thistleboon from which she died.
The Kardomah stood on the
opposite side of Castle Street
from the former Head Post Office, which used to stand in front of Swansea Castle .
It had then become the offices of the Evening Post, for which Dylan Thomas worked briefly as a young
reporter. Most Kardomah customers sat
downstairs in the main body of the former church, but in the 1930s that group
of artistic young men would gather in the first-floor gallery for animated
discussion about “Einstein and Epstein, Stravinsky and Greta Garbo, death and
religion, Picasso and girls”.
The group included at various
times the poets Dylan Thomas and Vernon Watkins, painter Alfred Janes, writer
and art critic Mervyn Levy, composer and linguist Daniel Jones, journalist Charles
Fisher and broadcaster Wynford Vaughan-Thomas, amongst others. By the time Vernon Watkins joined the group,
Dan Jones was abroad studying music
in Czechoslovakia , France , Germany
and the Netherlands ,
having won the 1935 Mendelssohn Scholarship. As Vernon worked
at Lloyds Bank in St Helen’s Road (now the premises of William Hill), in a
reserved occupation he was the last of the group to leave Swansea after the outbreak of war. He
and Dan Jones first met when both were working at the government code-breaking
centre at Bletchley Park .
Some of those young men are in the Evening Post photograph which was used
as a Radio Times cover in October 1949,
taken in the BBC’s temporary studio at The Grove in the Uplands. It shows Vernon Watkins, writer John
Pritchard, Alfred Janes, Dan Jones and Dylan Thomas, with John Griffiths, producer
of the radio programme “Swansea
and the Arts”. The last survivor of the Kardomah boys, writer and poet Charles Fisher, who lived
in Canada
until his death aged 91 in 2006, wrote: “I could always find time to enjoy an
hour or so of conversation in our time-honoured corner”.
The Kardomah is mentioned in Dylan Thomas’s radio script Return Journey, first broadcast in 1947. He recalls visiting Swansea after the February 1941 ‘Three Nights
Blitz’, and wrote “The Kardomah café was razed to the snow, the voices of the
coffee-drinkers - poets, painters, and musicians in their beginnings – all
lost.”
Nowadays the Kardomah in Portland
Street can accommodate 130 people, and provides
affordable quality food and drink, with waitress service. Having been frequented by a young Russell T
Davies, the “Doctor Who” screenwriter decided to film part of
an episode there. So in April 2009 Swansea ’s Kardomah was
visited by David Tennant, Catherine Tate and
Bernard Cribbins: not a bad
substitute for that 1930s clientele.
Thank you. In the 30s my mother in law and her sister didn't like the school dinners and so they came to the Karfomah instead.
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