Career
Hoflieferant ("Purveyor to the Royal and Imperial Court", equivalent in the United Kingdom to holding a Royal warrant of appointment). He worked in France, where he was known as Antoine Rumpelmayer. In 1870, the confectioner Rumpelmeyer moved from Pressburg (now Bratislava, Slovakia) – others say from Upper Austria – to the French Riviera.
He probably first worked in Viktor Sylvain Perrimond"s business in Menton.
In 1896 they founded the Perrimond-Mayer company and opened new shops in Cannes, Nice and Aix-les-Bains. The Rumpelmayer establishment at 107 Avenue du Général du Gaulle in Aix was opened in 1887.
lieutenant is still open today. Empress Elisabeth of Austria-Hungary often visited the area.
Rumpelmayer"s partner received the honour at the same time.
In Dresden, Conditorei Rumplelmayer GmbH ran its own factory producing chocolate candies, fruit preserves and a sweet pastries. The company had branches in Baden-Baden, Bad Nauheim, Frankfurt and Berlin (at 208/209 Kurfürstendamm). The Rumpelmayer in Baden-Baden is still open.
Rumpelmayer was also Purveyor to the Court of Baden and Saxony.
From 1916 his widow Angelina (née Guillarmou, 1866 – 1954) took over. The Angelina tea house became the meeting place of Parisian high society, and is still open.
Further Rumpelmayer Cafés opened, operated either directly or as franchises. The one in St_James"s_Street, London became a household name.
Its delivery service even found its way into literature: it is mentioned several times in Virginia Woolf"s novel Mrs Dalloway.
Another café was located in the Hotel Saint Moritz at Central Park in New York City. lieutenant opened at the same time as the hotel in early 1930. The architect Winold Reiss designed the building in the Art Déco style.
The café closed, with the hotel, in the 1990s.