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Catherine Cranston : ウィキペディア英語版
Catherine Cranston

Catherine Cranston (27 May 1849 – 18 April 1934), widely known as Kate Cranston or Miss Cranston, was a leading figure in the development of tea rooms. She is nowadays chiefly remembered as a major patron of Charles Rennie Mackintosh and Margaret MacDonald, in Glasgow, Scotland. The name of ''Miss Cranston's Tea Rooms'' lives on in reminiscences of Glasgow in its heyday.
==Background==
Her father, George Cranston, was a baker and pastry maker and, in 1849, the year of her birth, he became proprietor of the ''Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway Chop House and Commercial Lodgings'' at No. 39 George Square in Glasgow city centre.〔 The hotel was renamed the Royal Horse, then renamed again in May 1852 to become ''Cranston's Hotel and Dining Rooms'', offering:
:"Convenient Coffee room and detached Smoking Rooms on Ground Floor, commodious Commercial Room and Parlour, comfortable Bed-rooms and Baths, &c. Coffee always ready. Cigars, wines, spirits, ales, Newspapers, Time-Tables, Writing Materials. ''Superior and varied Bill of Fare at the usual moderate charges.''〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Advertisement, Post Office Directory 1852-3 )
Her slightly older brother Stuart (1848–1921) became a tea dealer and, according to ''Glasgow in 1901'', was "a pioneer of the business" there of "tea shops pure and simple" who by 1901 had three such tearooms offering nothing more substantial to eat than a sandwich. Kate went on to create much more of a social facility.
Like other cities in the United Kingdom, Glasgow was then a centre of the temperance movement which sought an alternative to male-centred pubs. Tea had previously been a luxury for the rich, but from the 1830s it was promoted as an alternative to alcoholic drinks, and many new cafés and coffee houses were opened, catering more for ordinary people. However it was not until the 1880s that tea rooms and tea shops became popular and fashionable.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 Tea 4 You: A Social History )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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