Saturday, 24 September 2022

Mrs. Ercolina Montabone … an Italian restaurant and unfinished story

Now this is 181 Oxford Road and is as close as I will ever get to Mrs. Ercolina Montabone who ran the Frascati Café Restaurant.

Frascati now a pub, 181, Oxford Road, 1956
I can trace the business back to at least 1901 when it was run by her husband, Vittorio Emmanuele Montabone.

It is one of those stories which came about because of a request from a friend interested in another Italian restauranter who 3 decades later was running his own restaurant also on Oxford Road.

But being Italian he was detained as an enemy alien in 1940 and died when the ship he was on was torpedoed in the same year by a German U Boat.

And in carrying out the preliminary search I came across Mr. and Mrs. Montabone and given we have an Italian side to the family I was hooked.

In all there are just ten documents which tell their story, ranging from one reference to the Masons, one court document, two census returns, a newspaper story along with their death certificates,  listings in two directories and their probate .

Not much I know for two lives lived out at the beginning of the last century, but there is enough to challenge those Brexiteers who are uncomfortable with anyone wanting to make a new start in this country.

And they were immigrants, with Vittorio Emmanuel coming from Italy and Ercolino from Switzerland.

I was hoping to find a reference to their naturalization as British citizens, but while this hasn’t come to light,  Ercolina did at some point gain that status which she duly recorded on the 1921 census.

The same census shows that the Montabone’s employed staff who were born in Italy and in Switzerland, a practice which stretched back over 20 years.

They lived above the business, and were still there when Ercolina died in 1923.  Her husband had preceded her fifteen years earlier and both were buried in Southern Cemetery.

An Italian thank you, 1918

Of the remaining documents, there are three that caught my interest.  The first was an entry in the book of Masons which shows that Vittorio joined the Manchester lodge in 1899, and a court document for 1908 showing that he was called as a witness and was paid 5s to cover his return rail fare from Manchester to Liverpool.

Both of which point to just how far he had integrated himself into British society.

But it is the last of the three that offers an insight into their origins, and it comes in the form of a newspaper article recording that Ercolina had been thanked by the “Royal Italian Consulate" for contributing £6 17s from collections she had raised which went towards the fund "for Refugees from the Invaded Provinces of Ventia”*

And that is it. 

There is a listing for the Frascati Hotel in 1961, but no indication of the owners or the manager.

But the building has now vanished under what became part of a retail unit which also included the University Chaplancy.


Location; Manchester

Picture; Frascati now a pub, 181 Oxford Road, H.W. Beaumont, 1956, m03860,  courtesy of Manchester Libraries, Information and Archives, Manchester City Council, http://images.manchester.gov.uk/index.php?session=pass


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