Anne Hughes (née Marguerite Anne McBride) was an American gallery owner, restaurateur and patron of the arts from Portland, Oregon. Hughes originated various enterprises including the Anne Hughes Coffee Room at Powell's bookstore, an eponymous art gallery, and the Kitchen Table Cafe.[1][2] Mentioned along with Matt Groening, Paul Allen, and Phil Knight, she was described as a "One-Woman KaffeeKlatsch" by Willamette Week as part of the weekly's 25th anniversary celebration in "They Rule: Some of our Favorite Portlanders".[3]
Personal life
Hughes has lived in Portland for over 60 years. She has four brothers, one of whom lives in Philadelphia.[2] Another brother, Francis McBride, is an architect. As of 2016, Hughes was living in a "tiny home", a 400 square-foot house located next door to her son, Michael.[4]
During the 1980s, Hughes hosted "Wednesday Breakfasts" which were famous for the scones.[24]
The Anne Hughes Coffee Room was started in 1985 at Powell's Books after Hughes gave a written proposal to owner, Michael Powell.[2][25] Hughes claimed the inspiration came to her after she sat on a box in the stacks and read an entire book.[4] The Coffee Room was famous as a meeting place and for The Anne Hughes Coffee Room Books, a series of blank journals put out by Hughes to be filled in by patrons. Leo Burt, the fugitive believed to be behind the Sterling Hall bombing and one-time Unabomber suspect may have visited the Coffee Room and written in one of the books in 1988.[26][27]
On September 24, 1990, Hughes was arrested along with 51 others during the so-called "Quayle Riot". She was charged with unlawful assembly. The riot began as a demonstration timed to correspond with a visit by then-Vice-President Dan Quayle. She subsequently sued the city, claiming that her constitutional rights were violated when she was hand-cuffed for more than 3 and one half hours, forced to kneel for over an hour and cursed at by Police. The suit was subsequently settled and the criminal charges against her were dropped.[28] Hughes operated the Kitchen Table Cafe in Portland's Buckman neighborhood for most of the 1990s. During that time, she was on the Board of the Buckman Community Association.[29]
Hughes previously worked providing organizing services to small businesses and individuals.[1]
She died from the effects of dementia on August 26, 2021.[30]