Mary Mac’s Tea Room doors first opened in 1945 when Mary McKinsey
decided to use her good Southern cooking to make money in the tough
post-World War II days. In those days, a woman couldn’t just open
up a restaurant, so many female proprietors used the more genteel
Southern name of “Tea Room.” Ponce de Leon Avenue sported clanking
trolley cars, the Atlanta Crackers Baseball team and tents serving ice
cold watermelons. There were many ornate movie theaters like the Fox
Theatre just down the street. And there were at least 16 other Tea
Rooms around intown Atlanta with Mary Mac’s being the only one of them
left.
In the early 1960s, Margaret Lupo bought Mary Mac’s and over the
next 30 years grew it into a larger restaurant by buying up property
next door to it and expanding. She was a hard working business woman
who loved Southern cooking and brought Mary Mac's from a small little
Tea Room to one of the South's best known restaurants. She
accomplished all this during a time when there were very few women in
business and it would be difficult for any woman to secure a bank loan.
The current owner, John Ferrell, purchased Mary Mac’s in 1994. He was
actually hand-chosen by Margaret Lupo to take over her beloved
restaurant. And he has not let her down as he continues a great
tradition of Southern cuisine and hospitality. The location has stayed
the same, and the food remains nearly identical to what it was over
sixty years ago.