Tysta Mari was a famous coffee shop and restaurant in Stockholm, Sweden, known to be popular with artists, intellectuals and journalists. It was established in 1834 by Maria Christina Lindström (1806–1895) on the intersection of Jakobsgatan and Drottninggatan. The original Tysta Mari was closed in 1954, but a new coffee shop and restaurant with the same names was opened in 1974 on Östermalm.
It got its name Tysta Mari (literary: "Silent Mary") as a description the founder Maria Christina Lindström's unobtrusive and discreet way of doing business and serving, and after this name became common, she made the nickname the cafe's official name.
In 1934, Tysta Mari moved to a location on Tegelbacken. Maria Christina Lindström retired in 1857 and the business was continued by first her cousin Elise Granberg and in 1879 by the sisters Amalia and Mina Damberg.[1] The Tysta Mari finally closed its doors in 1954, when the locale Tegelbacken was demolished for renovations and building of a more modern edifice.
Tysta Mari was famous in 19th-century Stockholm and came to be the common used name for a certain category of coffee shops, often managed by women, where no alcohol was served, no gaming and betting was allowed, and which therefore became socially acceptable for a clientele of upperclass women.[2] This was noted in the a book about Stockholm, Nya Stockholm ('New Stockholm') by Claës Lundin in 1890, who described the name in this capacity in his description of the contemporary restaurant-life in Stockholm:
"Tysta Mari-coffee shops: common name for a coffee shop with a good range, solid service and quiet and decent customers. In those, one commonly sees many ladies among the clientele."[3]