Thursday 18 August 2011

An 'Ace' Special Visitor


Last week we were delighted to be visited by Courtney Edenborough, son of Vick Edenborough who was the original owner of the Ace Cafe in London, on which our current exhibition Coming Of Age At The Ace Cafe is based.

Courtney was good enough to spend time sharing his recollections of the Ace in the 50s and 60s with staff at the museum, as well as being interviewed about his experiences for the Vic Minett show on BBC Radio Coventry & Warwickshire that afternoon.

We were fascinated to hear Courtney’s stories about life at the Ace – whilst he and his father were never hugely involved in the running of the cafe, which was one of five catering establishments owned by the family, Courtney’s weekly visits to collect the takings and have a meal were enough to provide him with a wealth of interesting tales from behind the counter.

It was great to hear that for many years the Ace’s best seller was the humble cup of tea – made in huge gallon tea pots and costing a ha’penny a cup when the cafe first opened, Courtney remembers the outcry from their loyal lorry driver customers each time the price of tea was raised. “They always came back in the end though” he told us.

But as we know it wasn’t all tea and sympathy at the cafe – whilst it was never intentionally promoted as a ‘bikers cafe’, over the years the Ace became a meeting place for young men and their bikes, and with them came some perhaps less desirable clientele. Courtney regaled us with stories of some of London’s criminal underworld who would come to the Ace for a celebratory meal after pulling off a big ‘job’ – but the police soon got wise to this and would come looking for them at the cafe!

Courtney himself was never a biker, in fact he told us about the one occasion he had ridden pillion on an AJS owned by one of the cafe’s customers and had the fright of his life as they burned off up the North Circular. Fortunately he was brought back to the Ace unharmed, but he was less lucky on the night he was coshed by a robber as he left with the week’s takings, causing injuries that have left him partially deaf later in life.

But there were loads of good times too, perhaps because the cafe was start
ed in such a gentlemanly manner; Courtney’s father Vic sealed the deal to build the cafe on a handshake – no paperwork changed hands with the builder, no contracts were raised, but on this ‘gentlemans agreement’ one of the most iconic cafes in the UK was built and so began the fascinating story of the Ace.

When we asked Courtney what he thought of our Coming Of Age At The Ace Cafe exhibition he was extremely complimentary, saying that he thought we had captured the atmosphere and feeling of the old cafe perfectly – we couldn’t ask for higher praise than that.

Coming Of Age At The Ace Cafe, our exhibition which tells the story of the iconic cafe and its customers, is at Coventry Transport Museum until Sunday 2 October 2011. Full details and ticket prices here.

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