The Maid and Magpie Hotel, an Adelaide landmark and one
of the city’s oldest and most historic hotels, was
first licensed on June 13th 1848 in an open paddock in
a commanding position where Magill, Payneham and Fullarton
Roads met North Terrace and Baliol Street.
The owner was George Heinrich Muller who leased it to landlord
Johann Heinrich Fritz Beddies and his new wife Eleanor Dempsey.
Immediately the landlord began the long tradition of attracting
patrons by providing various entertainments during the course
of a year including brass bands, singing, fireworks, sporting
events and shooting competitions as well as the usual food,
drink and beds for the locals (who were mainly German immigrants),
visitors and travellers.
The Maid was also a centre of communication, a touchstone
for democracy, meeting place for various groups, occasional
scene of coronial inquests and a riot once.
At one stage in the 1860’s the Maid boasted the following
sporting pastimes: Quoits, Four Corners, Billiards, Bagatelle,
Nine Pins, a gymnasium and a cricket ground.
Also in the 1860’s Louis Muller who was a bullock-driver,
shepherd, stockrider, gold digger, explorer and manager
of the most remote cattle station in the North bought the
property.
In 1882 his success meant he was able to engage architects
and have the second story added. In the late 1880’s
regular foot races were held to attract custom until a large
galvanized shed with an earthen floor and backless chairs
known as the Star Theatre was erected to show films featuring
the Wild West and the likes of Charlie Chaplin.
In the 1920’s and 30’s it was a common sight
to see some 50 – 100 bikes parked at the front of
the Maid belonging to the “Trammies” (tram workers)
on their way home from the Hackney depot.
From the 1940’s until the late Seventies the Maid
continued its role as the local meeting place and watering
hole seeing out the end of the Six O’Clock swill with
pubs closing at 6pm.
During the late Seventies, Eighties and early Nineties
the Maid was continually upgraded and was a favoured source
of good food, good company and a leading pub of its time.
In the Nineties it attracted crowds of young people from
the rural areas then spent time with a children’s
adventure playground under its roof continuing the long
history of providing for patrons.
In 2005 one of Adelaide’s leading hotel families,
the Faheys, purchased the Maid with a vision to once again
make the Maid a leading destination providing a relaxed
and attractive atmosphere, impeccable service, fine food
and a feeling of wanting to come back again and again.