Luigi Gatti (businessman)

Gaspare Antonio Pietro "Luigi" Gatti (3 January 1875 – 15 April 1912) was an Italian businessman and restaurateur, best known as the manager of the À la Carte restaurant on the RMS Titanic, catering to passengers for whom first-class service was not exclusive enough.[1][2]

Luigi Gatti
Born
Gaspare Antonio Pietro Gatti

3 January 1875
Died15 April 1912 (aged 37)
RMS Titanic wreck site; 600 km (320 nmi) south-southeast off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada
Resting placeFairview Cemetery, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
NationalityItalian
OccupationRestaurant entrepreneur
Spouse(s)Edith Kate Cheese
Children1
The À la Carte Restaurant, on the RMS Titanic

Early life

Gatti was born on 3 January 1875 in Montalto Pavese, Italy.[1] He was one of eleven children born to Paolo Gatti, a local councillor and magistrate, and Maria Nascimbene.[1]

Personal life

In 1902, at St Luke's, Hammersmith, Gatti married Edith Kate Cheese, the daughter of steward William James Cheese and his wife Emily of Chelsea.[1][3] They had a son Luigi Victor, "Vittorio" born in 1904.[1][3] In 1902, they were living in Hammersmith, in 1911 in Great Titchfield Street, Marylebone, London, and in 1912 in Southampton.[1]

Career

Gatti owned and ran two restaurants in London, Gatti's Adelphi and Gatti's Strand.[4]

Olympic and Titanic restaurants

Gatti was already running the À la Carte restaurant on the RMS Olympic, and because of its success, Titanic's À la Carte was even larger, able to seat over 150, with over 60 staff, mostly Italian and French, all employed directly by Gatti, who ran these restaurants as concessions. For Titanic's maiden voyage, both Gatti and his head chef on Olympic sailed to ensure the new restaurant's success.[2][4]

Only first class passengers were permitted; they had to book tables in advance and pay a supplement to the first-class fare which included full board in the first-class dining room.[2] Even into the 1890s, dining in public was not considered socially acceptable by some in the upper classes, especially the nobility and "old money", so it was felt necessary in effect to further divide the first class passengers.[2] There was also a reception area for pre-dinner drinks, and a Café Parisien designed to appeal to Americans.[2] The À la Carte restaurant used different china and silver plate from the main first-class restaurant.[2]

Death

Gatti went down with the ship, dying on 15 April 1912.[1][5] His body was recovered by the CS Minia between 26 April and 6 May 1912, and buried in Fairview Cemetery, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.[1]

gollark: It is done.
gollark: I'll go swap out the tables and variables for smaller ones later™.
gollark: This is an EXTREMELY reasonable way to do conditionals, lyric lυ.
gollark: ```sqlWITH RECURSIVE counter(x) AS (VALUES(10) UNION ALL SELECT x-1 FROM counter WHERE x>1), bottle(x, str) AS (SELECT x, SUBSTR(' bottles', 1, (x <> 1) + 7) || ' of beer' FROM counter)SELECT PRINTF('%d%s on the wall%d%sTake one down, pass it around%d%s on the wall', x, str, x, str, x - 1, (SELECT str FROM bottle WHERE x = x - 1)) FROM bottle;```
gollark: Yes. Well, not really golfing, it won't be very small.

References

  1. "Sig. Gaspare Antonio Pietro Gatti (Luigi)". Encyclopedia Titanica. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
  2. "Titanic Facts – Discover Facts about the Titanic – Titanic Stories". Titanic Belfast. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
  3. Gill, Anton. (2011). Titanic: Building the World's Most Famous Ship. Guilford: Lyons Press. p. 232. ISBN 978-0-7627-7573-6.
  4. DiFulgo, J. Robert (2014). Titanic's Resurrected Secret—H.E.W. Bloomington: iUniverse. p. 148. ISBN 978-1-4917-2268-8.
  5. Luigi Gatti, sul Titanic un master chef dell'Oltrepo. Roberto Lodigiani & Pier Angelo Vincenzi, la Provincia Pavese, 3 April 2012. Retrieved 6 May 2017.
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