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Kathleen Mulhern, 93, owner of The Garden, which sparked Philly’s early restaurant renaissance

Mrs. Mulhern had no previous experience running a restaurant in 1974 when she opened The Garden at 1617 Spruce St. She started with a tiny bar and a few umbrella-topped tables in a garden. What followed was a restaurant renaissance that continues today.

Kathleen Mulhern in a 1997 Inquirer photo.
Kathleen Mulhern in a 1997 Inquirer photo.Read moreCHARLES FOX / Staff Photographer

Kathleen Mulhern, 93, a Philadelphia entrepreneur who helped spark the city’s restaurant renaissance in 1974 by opening a tiny eatery that became famous as The Garden, died Saturday, Feb. 2, of the flu at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital.

Starting with a bar and a few umbrella-topped tables in a garden just off 1617 Spruce St., Mrs. Mulhern, who had no previous experience in running a restaurant, came equipped only with a vision of what she wanted the eatery to be.

That image was informed by trips she had taken to Europe, especially Paris, where she enjoyed wonderful meals, took mental notes, and then taught herself to cook once she arrived home.

Getting financing to start The Garden was not easy, she told the Inquirer in 1980. “No one wanted to talk with me,” she said. “I embarrassed the hell out of people, but I had this vision.”

Mrs. Mulhern soon learned that she was on to something. People began flocking to The Garden, which expanded and began to draw the city’s wealthy and powerful.

“During Mayor Bill Green’s administration, Green and his cabinet would often lunch in the Swan Room, famous for the antique swan decoys,” said Harry Adamson, a former waiter at The Garden. “Philadelphia Museum of Art President Robert Montgomery Scott was at The Garden every day for luncheon at table 28, coming and going from Fairmount on his fold-up bicycle.”

By 1980, local columnists such as Mike Shoup began to take note. “Today, you can dine at The Garden, and it takes no twist of the arm to conclude that it’s one of the city’s best,” he wrote in the Inquirer. “My personal feeling is that The Garden and its contemporaries, more than any other factor, are what have given the city its new image and character.”

Tina Pappajohn, Mrs. Mulhern’s assistant, said The Garden was “one of the early renaissance restaurants in Philadelphia that changed the whole world here.”

Mrs. Mulhern and her staff worked diligently to make the food and dining experience memorable. “All the mirrors and glass sparkled, the copper gleamed, the food was uncommonly beautiful and delicious,” Pappajohn said. “Every effort was made to remove every bone from every fish.”

“Some male waiters thought she was a terror, but she was a perfectionist,” said Adamson. “The food, wine, flowers, atmosphere, service, and the waiter's aprons and oxford shirts had to be first-rate.”

Adamson said The Garden was like a finishing school for the restaurant business, where the employees could learn about food, fine wine, and gracious service. “And the beautiful French wallpaper was incredible,” he said.

Born and reared at 58th and Kingsessing Streets in Southwest Philadelphia, Mrs. Mulhern attended public schools. She learned culinary skills “by loving to eat and going to France,” Pappajohn said.

Early in her career, she married Mike Mullane, but they soon divorced. They had no children.

The Garden closed after a fire in 2000. Mrs. Mulhern was the proprietor of another restaurant, Harry’s Bar and Grill, which opened in 1985 at 22 S. 18th St. It closed in the mid-1990s.

Mrs. Mulhern was a quiet philanthropist. She supported an elementary school in North Philadelphia and supplied pianos for a charter school so music students there could play. She supported the Philadelphia Museum of Art and helped back the move of the Barnes Museum from Merion to the Benjamin Franklin Parkway.

She gave money to the Free Library of Philadelphia and the Athenaeum of Philadelphia, a special collections library. She was a member of the Franklin Inn Club and the Shakespeare Society of Philadelphia.

“She was an ardent advocate of the city,” Pappajohn said.

There were no survivors. No funeral is planned.

Memorial donations may be made to Philabundance via

https://www.philabundance.org/donate/

or to Planned Parenthood Southeastern Pennsylvania via www.weareplannedparenthoodaction.org.