Flickorna Lundgren
Flickorna Lundgren is a café and restaurant that was started in 1938 by the sisters Greta, Anna, Ebba, Marta, Rut, Britt-Marie, and Ella Lundgren. Flickorna Lundgren lies in Skäret between Arild and Jonstorp in Höganäs municipality, Sweden. Several famous guest have visited the café through the years, with the most famous, king Gustaf VI Adolf, who was a regular between 1945 and 1973. The business have received Gastronomiska akademien's diplom. In 2014, they received White Guide's award "Worth a journey".
History
In 1927, Alexander and Anna Lundgren bought a timber framed fisher's cot built 1732 in Skäret. They were farmers from Allerum and renovated the cottage to turn it into a holiday home for the family. During the difficult 1930s, in order to keep the summer cottage, the oldest sister Greta opened the café. She got help from Rut, who was a baker's apprentice, and the younger sisters. The business expanded quickly and in 1939 they built a separate bakery. Tragically Ebba succumbed to tuberculosis and died in 1939.Crown-prince, and later king, Gustav Adolf visited Flickorna Lundgren the first time in 1945 during an excursion to watch the solar eclipse. He would then visit the café several times per year during his lifetime, and sometimes bring shoots and plants in exchange for a box of vanilla hearts.
Disagreements between the sister eventually led to two of them, Greta and Rut, leaving the business. The eventual trial went through several processes where Greta lost.
At the start of the 1960s, there were only three sisters left in the business; Marta, Britt-Marie, and Ella. The increased access to cars during the 1960s increased the number of customers, and articles in the weekly press made the café famous throughout Sweden and Denmark.
They operated the café until 1988 when Ella's oldest son Mats Fejne took over.