Delaware Valley businesswoman and entrepureneur,
Margaret Kuo, heads the The Kuo Group, a real estate holding company;
six successful restaurants in Delaware County and the Main Line,
Peking, Mandarin, Tokyo, Margaret Kuo's Chopsticks and Margaret
Kuo's Restaurants, as well as Pearl of the East, an import/export
trading company. Also active in community affairs, business and
service groups, Mrs. Kuo's many honors include the March of Dimes
Business Service Award, the Philadelphia Journal Award for Outstanding
Women in Business, and being named to the list of Pennsylvania's
50 Best Women in Business for 1999. She was awarded a Texaco company
scholarship to attend NAWBO conference in Washington DC in 1998
and was elected a Pennsylvania Representative to the White House
Conference on Small Business in 1995. Her many awards for business
leadership and community service include being named a Pennsylvania
Shining Star in 1993 and the Panache Award by The Delaware Valley
Restaurant Association in 1997.
An advocate of public service and higher education,
Mrs. Kuo fulfilled a long time goal by completing a Master of
Public Administration degree from Harvard University's John F.
Kennedy School of Government in 1996, taking a short leave of
absence from her successful business interests.
Born in the Manchurian Province of mainland
China, Mrs. Kuo was the fourth of five children born into a family
of educators and scholars. Her grandfather was principal of an
elemantary school. During World War II, her father, a successful
businessman, received a commendation from the U.S. Army for assistance
he rendered. He also served as a Senator, elected to represent
his home province in Manchuria. In a period of unrest as the
Communists gained power Mrs. Kuo's family emigrated to Taiwan
where she grew up and was educated. Her chief passion as a young
girl was ballet which she studied for many years, often presenting
solo performances at various colleges and on public television.
After graduating with a degree in Chemical Engineering, Margaret
taught high school math and general science for a year.
Receiving a scholarship, Mrs. Kuo came to the
United States to pursue higher education where she met her husband,
Warren, a fellow student at the University of Connecticut. The
young couple moved to the Philadelphia area where they started
a family and their successful business ventures. At first Margaret
worked as a chemist and research assistant at Women's Medical
College of Pennsylvania, EF Houton Oil & Chemical Company,
and Allied Chemical.
Since Margaret Kuo was raised in a world where
culinary arts were regarded on a level with art, literature and
music with recipes treasured as works of art, establishing a
restaurant was a natural follow-up. Creativity and business innovation
have been routine since the opening of Kuo's first Peking restaurant,
recognized at the time by Elaine Tate, Food Critic for the Philadelphia
Inquirer, as the first to offer Chinese Royal Banquet including
authentic Peking duck, 30 years ago. Gracing the cover of Main
Line Today Magazine in January 2003 closely followed the
honor of a featured review by Craig LaBan in the Philadelphia
Inquirer Magazine. She has been honored four times with
a "Best of Philly" by Philadelphia Magazine.
The Granite Run Mall Peking is often used as a model of success
for a high end restaurant in a mall by mall managers as they
seek to attract new business. Zagat Reviews and many accolades
as Best Restaurant and Best Chinese Restaurant have followed.
Mrs. Kuo has raised two sons, both Boston University
graduates––Mark who is her right hand man in the
family business and Paul, who is currently taking graduate work
in computer science at the University of Pennsylvania. Completing
the Kuos immediate family are three grandchildren, Clarissa,
Evan and Henna.
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