Early life He was born on 22 July 1835 in
Ross-on-Wye, the eldest son of Charles John Gordon, who established himself as a decorator and paperhanger in the
City of London. Frederick began by assisting his father, but then trained in the law, and always called himself a solicitor. Gordon turned in his thirties to the promotion of elegant restaurants, hitherto not fully developed in Victorian London. With
Horatio Davies, later owner of
Pimm's and
Lord Mayor of London, he formed Messrs. Gordon and Company. Their first success came with the conversion in 1868 of the fifteenth-century
Crosby Hall, on
Bishopsgate in the City of London, into a fashionable eating place, with an open layout in the vast Great Hall instead of the traditional boxes. Waitresses were employed, and there were facilities for women visitors. The King's Head in
Fenchurch Street followed, also richly decorated. Gordon's wider fame began with his creation in 1874 of the Holborn Restaurant further west. The Holborn was expanded in 1879 and again in 1883–4. Illustrated brochures depicted a series of richly decorated saloons embellished with marble, fresco work and stained glass. A favourite venue for institutional dinners and parties, the Holborn survived until it was bombed in the Second World War.
Hotels After 1890 Gordon moved into hotels, founding the Gordon Hotels chain and becoming known as "The Napoleon of the Hotel World". Among those in his ownership were the Grand Hotel in
Trafalgar Square and the
Metropole Hotel in London; the Burlington Hotel, Eastbourne; the
Brighton Metropole; the Hotel Metropole, Cannes; and the
Hotel Metropole, Monte Carlo. He was also chairman of The Frederick Hotels Company Limited, and held directorships at a wide variety of companies including
Ashanti Goldfields,
Pears soap, and
Bovril. He bought the
Apollinaris mineral water business in 1897 from its founder
Edward Steinkopff and his co-partners for nearly £2,000,000 (approximately £2–4 billion in 2016).
Stanmore Gordon is credited with developing
Stanmore from a rural village to a London suburb. In 1890 he opened his own railway line, the
Harrow and Stanmore Railway, to serve his luxury country hotel there,
Bentley Priory. He also built a residential avenue of suburban houses in Stanmore, which he named
Gordon Avenue, to attract wealthy Londoners to come to live in the country and commute into the city on his new railway. He also laid out Stanmore Golf Course. Neither the Bentley Priory Hotel nor the railway were commercially successful, and in 1899 he wound up the Harrow and Stanmore Railway and sold it outright to the
LNWR for £35,000. Gordon took up residence with his family at Bentley Priory. ==Death and legacy==