California Tea Rooms

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Copper Kettle Tea Room, 23 Mercantile Place, Los Angeles, California, postcard front, circa 1909. The hand-lettered caption on the black and white photo that was the basis for this card reads "Copper Kettle Inn," but that is an error, because all advertising ephemera and references to the establishment in contemporary newspapers and magazines identify it as the Copper Kettle Tea Room. The Copper Kettle opened in 1908 under the proprietorship of two sisters, Smith college alumna Harriet Morris (1880 - 1961) and Barnard College alumna Mildred Morris, helped by their friend Beatrice Wigmore. In addition to tea and light lunches, The Copper Kettle sold Japanese and Chinese basketry and gift wares; by 1915 they were also marketing confections or candies that were sold along the Southern Pacific Railroad route. The building that housed The Copper Kettle -- and, in fact, every shop on both sides of the street, and the entirety of Mercantile Place itself -- was demolished in 1923 as part of a large urban high-rise building program.
Copper Kettle Tea Room, 23 Mercantile Place, Los Angeles, California, postcard back, circa 1909.
File:Mary Louise Tea Room Los Angeles-Interior Postcard Front.jpg
Mary Louise Tea Room Los Angeles-Interior postcard front
File:Mary Louise Tea Room Los Angeles-Interior Postcard Back.jpg
Mary Louise Tea Room Los Angeles-Interior postcard back
File:Mary Louise Tea Room Foyer Los Angeles postcard front.jpg
Mary Louise Tea Room Foyer Los Angeles postcard front
File:Mary Louise Tea Room Mah-Jong Room Los Angeles PostcardFront.jpg
Mary Louise Tea Room Mah-Jong Room Los Angeles postcard front
Mary Louise Tea Room Mah-Jong Room Los Angeles postcard back


Mary Louise Tea Room Los Angeles-Interior Postcard Front


catherine yronwode
curator, historian, and docent
The Mystic Tea Room


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