In 1878 Miss Kate Cranston opened her first tearoom, the Crown Luncheon Room, on
Argyle Street, Glasgow. She set high standards of service, food quality and cleanliness, and her innovation lay in seeing the social need for something more than a restaurant or a simple "tea shop", and in putting equal attention into providing amenities designed in the latest style. Her first tearoom was decorated in a contemporary baronial style. On 16 September 1886 she opened her Ingram Street tearoom and in 1888 commissioned
George Walton to decorate a new smoking room in the
Arts and Crafts style in one of her tea rooms. She opened new tearooms in Buchanan Street in 1897 (designed by
George Washington Browne), expanded to take over the whole building in Argyle Street by 1898 (designed by
H and D Barclay), then completed her chain of four establishments with the
Willow Tearooms (by
Charles Rennie Mackintosh) in
Sauchiehall Street, opened in 1903. The city was a centre of artistic innovation at the time, and the tearooms served as art galleries for paintings by the "
Glasgow Boys". The architect Sir
Edwin Lutyens visited the Buchanan Street tearoom in 1898, finding it "just a little outré", and wrote from there to his wife that "Miss Cranston is now Mrs. Cochrane, a dark, fat wee body with black sparkling luminous eyes, wears a bonnet garnished with roses, and has made a fortune by supplying cheap clean goods in surroundings prompted by the New Art Glasgow School." Tea rooms opened around the city, and in the late 1880s fine hotels elsewhere in Britain and in America began to offer tea service in tea rooms and tea courts.
Glasgow in 1901 reported that "Glasgow, in truth, is a very
Tokio for tea-rooms. Nowhere can one have
so much for so little, and nowhere are such places more popular and frequented." and that "It is not the accent of the people, nor the painted houses, nor yet the absence of
Highland policemen that makes the Glasgow man in London feel that he is
in a foreign town and far from home. It is a simpler matter. It is the lack of tea-shops." He was assisted in this by
Charles Rennie Mackintosh who designed wall
murals in the form of
stencilled
friezes depicting opposing pairs of elongated female figures surrounded by roses for the ladies' tearoom, the luncheon room and the smokers' gallery. :"It is believed (and averred) that in no other town can you see in a place of refreshment such ingenious and beautiful decorations in the style of the new art as in Miss Cranston's shop in Buchanan Street. Indeed, so general in the city is this belief that it has caused the Glasgow man of the better sort to coin a new adjective denoting the height of beauty... 'It's quite Kate Cranston-ish !' " In 1900 Kate Cranston gave Mackintosh the opportunity to redesign an entire room, at the Ingram Street tearoom. He had just recently married the artist
Margaret MacDonald, and together they created the White Dining Room, including a hallway opening onto the street and divided off by a wooden screen with
leaded glass panels, giving those entering glimpses into the room itself. His fame was spreading, and in 1902
The Studio wrote of "Miss Cranston, whose tea-rooms, designed by Mr. Mackintosh, are reckoned by some of the pilgrims to Glasgow as one of the sights of the city."
The Willow Tearooms Next Kate Cranston gave Mackintosh the major commission for an entire building in Sauchiehall Street, again in collaboration with his wife Margaret MacDonald on designs for the interiors. Behind a strikingly simple new façade this building provided three interlinked main tearooms at the ground floor and on a first floor gallery, with steps from that leading up a further half-storey to the famous "Room de Luxe" stretching the width of the building above the main entrance and front tearoom. In a humorous review of the new tearoom for the
Glasgow Evening News titled
Erchie in an Art Tea Room,
Neil Munro described the "Room de Looks": ::::::"
The chairs is no like ony ither chairs ever I clapped eyes on, but ye could easy guess they were chairs, and a' roond the place there's a lump o' looking-gless wi' purple leeks pented on it every noo and then." which was home to herself and her husband John Cochrane. Mackintosh carried out further work on the Argyle Street tearoom in 1906 to design a basement conversion to form
The Dutch kitchen. He did further redesigns for rooms in the Ingram Street tearooms, creating the
Cloister Room and the
Chinese Room in 1911. The latter provides an exotic fantasy, with bright blue finished timber screens incorporating a cashier's kiosk, elaborate door lintels and dark blue finished furniture, all in Mackintosh's version of an oriental style. In the same year Kate Cranston provided temporary "Exhibition Cafes" at the
Scottish International Exhibition, apparently set up and designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh, though nothing is now known of his scheme for this. The menu card designed by
Margaret MacDonald Mackintosh shows the name for the tearooms,
The White Cockade, but makes no visual connection with this reference to
Jacobitism. It gives credit for supply of cakes to Miss Cranstons Bakery, 292 St Vincent St., Glasgow. In 1916 Kate opened ''Cranston's Cinema De Luxe'' in an entertainment complex designed for her by the architect
James Miller, occupying the third floor of a six-storey building in Renfield Street, Glasgow. In 1917 Mackintosh carried out his last commission for Kate Cranston, and indeed one of his last architectural works to be constructed, with the design of an extension of the Willow Tea Rooms into the basement of the building next door to create
The Dug Out in a style that anticipated
Art Deco. ==Legacy==