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Walter Scott
- father of "the diner" (http://www.dinermuseum.org/
historyimages/walterscott.jpg)

Harley Hudson
- Hudson's - Coeur d'Alene
(http://www.spokesmanreview.com/ blogs/
video/thumbs/031007_hudsons.jpg)

Roy Allen - A&W Root
Beer, Restaurants (http://www.awrootbeer.com/
images/roy.jpg)
 
Jack Kriendler (top) and Charlie
Berns - founded 21 Club
(http://static.orient-express.com/onyc/images/
250images/onyc_250_archive7.jpg)

Howard Dearing Johnson
(http://books.google.com/books?id=
vwyiE8Gd8GQC&pg=PA68&img=1 &zoom=3&hl=en&sig= ACfU3U2BfnFubawVJWU0Vfh
B34KFindeTw&w=575)

Bob Wian -
Bob's Big Boy (http://members.aol.com/ pugwm/wian1a.jpg)

Carl Karcher -
CKE Restaurants, Inc. (http://www.nndb.com/people/691/
000025616/carlkarcherbig.jpg)

Irvine Robbins
- co-founder Baskin-Robbins (http://www.glendalehistorical.org/
images/robbins.gif)

William Rosenberg
- Dunkin' Donuts (https://www.dunkindonuts.com/ images/
aboutus/company/founder/ brosenberg_large.jpg)

Bob Evans -
Bob Evans Farms (http://www.bobevans.com/website/
homepage.nsf/ 17487be8e730 dee68525676300709c67/ 05e207a805d6274
f852573010082629b/ Content/0.84?OpenElement& FieldElemFormat=jpg)

Frank Carney
- Co-Founder Pizza Hut (http://www.pizzamarketplace.com/
images/Carney-Crop.jpg)

Al Lapin - founder IHOP
(http://LifeInLegacy.com/ 2004/0626/LapinAl.jpg)

Ben Ali - Ben's Chili Bowl (http://www.roadfood.com/ photos/3216.JPG)

Virginia Ali -
Ben's Chili Bowl (http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/
2007/09/16/us/16washington.600.jpg)

Wilbur Hardee - Hardee's Food
Systems (http://web.lib.ecu.edu/ images/03/1P9481.jpg)

Ron Joyce,
Tim Horton - Tim Hortons
(http://www.timhortons.com/
images/general/history1967.jpg)

Leroy and Forrest Raffel -
founders Arby's (http://www.arbysrestaurant.com/i
mages/ aboutSliced/foundersPhoto.jpg)

Bill Darden
- Red Lobster (http://www.dardenrestaurants.com/i
mages/photos/ photo_hist_bill_color.jpg)

Wolfgang Puck -
Spago (http://www.biography.com/ biography/images/
episode_images/ puck_wolfgang_320x240.jpg)

James W. McLamore - co-founder Burger King
(http://www.burgerking.ca/ imagelibrary/images/jwm.jpg)

Alice Waters
- Chez Panisse
(http://www.chezpanisse.com/ img/imgalicesm3.jpg)

Thomas S. Monaghan
- Domino's Pizza (http://www.avemaria.edu/
uploads/pagesfiles/376.jpg)

Phil Romano
- Fuddrucker's
(http://www.heroesforhumanity.com/ myhero/img/Phil%2BRomano.jpg)

Fred Harvey
(http://www.kshs.org/publicat/ kaleidoscope/graphics/
2002april_harvey.jpg)

Joseph Horn
(http://www.theautomat.net/
images/horn.jpg)

Frank Hardart
(http://www.theautomat.net/ images/hardart.jpg)

Colonel Harlan Sanders
(http://www.biography.com/ biography/images/
episode_images/ sanders_Colonel320x240.jpg)

Bernard Loiseau
-
La Côte d'Or
(http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/ media/images/ 38876000/jpg/
_38876979_ap203bodyfood.jpg)

Original McDonald's
1948 Drive -In in San Bernardino, CA
(http://www.route-66.com/mcdonalds/images/1948.jpg)

McDonald's 1953
look - rectangle building with two golden arches
(http://www.route-66.com/mcdonalds/images/1955-n.jpg)

Richard and Maurice
McDonald (http://nhptv.org/outlook/nh_originals/
images/mcDonald_bros_color_72.jpg)

Ray Kroc
-McDonald's
(http://image.pathfinder.com/ time/time100/
builder/images/profilepix/kroc.jpg)
January 15, 1984 Obituary:
http://www.nytimes.com/
learning/ general/onthisday/ bday/1005.html

Sherman Billingsley
- Stork Club
(http://www.storkclub.org/
graphics/billingsley.jpg)

Glen Bell
(http://www.tacobell.com.ph/ images/glen_bell.gif)

Claude Terrail - La Tour d'Argent
(http://www.gayot.com/images/
restaurants/claude_terrail.jpg)

Trader Vic
(http://www.tradervics.com/ images/rest-trader.jpg)

Dave Thomas
(http://obits.eons.com/
obits/tributes/dave_thomas/2211-2-photo.jpg)

Walt Anderson and Billy
Ingram - founders of White Castle Systems, Inc.
(http://www.ohiohistory.org/etcetera/ exhibits/
ohiopix/images/AL00733.jpg)

First White Castle
- 1921 in Wichita, KS (http://www.npr.org/programs/morning/ features/patc/hamburger/
gallery/wcastle.jpg)
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FOOD SERVICE -
Business History of Companies
Interesting Dates
December 13, 1827 - Swiss wine merchant Giovanni Del-Monico, older brother Pietro opened café,
pastry shop in
lower Manhattan; 1830 - Delmonico's restaurant opened.
1840 -
Antoine Alciatore (27) opened pension, boarding house, restaurant on St.
Louis Street in New Orleans, LA; 1868 - moved to spot on St. Louis
Street where restaurant stands today; 1887 - Jules (son)
took over; invented Oysters Rockefeller, named for richness of
sauce; 1932 - Roy Louis (son) took over, headed restaurant
for almost 40 years until his death in 1972; Marie Louise (Roy's
daughter) married William Guste; Alciatore-Guste family members have
guided restaurant to present day.
1849 - Nikola Budrovich, Antonio
Gasparich, Frank Kosta (Croatian immigrants) opened New World Coffee
Saloon
on Commercial Street in San
Francisco, CA; 1876 - John Tadich (Croatian immigrant)
began working at Saloon; 1882 - owners Samuel Becir,
Eugene Masounette changed name to "Cold Day Restaurant" (Alexander
Badlam Jr. defeated in 1882 Assessors Election, "It's a cold day when I
get left" slogan); 1883 - Becir interest acquired by
Gaspar Pavica; 1887 - Masounette's interest acquired by
Tadich; 1888 - bought out Pavica, assumed full ownership
of restaurant; August 26, 1912 - renamed Tadich's Grill,
located at 525 Clay St.; 1928 - acquired by three Buich
brothers (employees since 1913); 1961 - full ownership
acquired by Louie Buich (last brother employed under Tadich, in 1922);
1967 - redeveloped, moved to current location at 240
California Street; 1993 - interest passed to Steve Buich
(third generation); oldest restaurant in State of California.
February 1855
- El Nivel ( the "level", previously building
where water level in Mexico City was measured) in Mexico City received
first cantina license after the U.S.-Mexican war (holds liquor license
#1); prior to 1968 - acquired by Jesus Aguirre; around 30
presidents from Sebastian Lerdo de Tejada in 1872 to Ernesto Zedillo
(1994-2000) had visited for a drink while in office; January 2,
2008 - closed, lost long legal battle against owners of
building, National Autonomous University of Mexico.
1864 -
Frenchman George Voges opened Jack's in San Francisco; acquired by
Jacques Monique; acquired by Edward Blanque; 1907 -
acquired by Michel Redinger, became part owner after putting in money to
rebuild after the 1906 earthquake; Paul Redinger (brother) bought out
Edward Blanque's share; eventually Jack Redinger (son) became owner;
1930 - made famous in Maltese Falcon, written by Dashiell Hammett;
December 1996 - acquired by John Konstin (including the
building), owner of John's Grill, for $132 million.
1872 -
Walter Scott's business selling sandwiches became so lucrative, quit his
printing work (part-time pressman, type compositor in Providence, RI),
began to sell food at night from horse-drawn covered express wagon
parked outside Providence Journal newspaper office; inspired birth of
"the diner".
1875 -
Luis Ober filed an application to remodel numbers 3 and 4 Winter Place
(Boston, MA) into café and dwelling; Eben Jordan, co-founder of Jordan
Marsh Company, supposedly advanced funds needed to purchase, remodel the
buildings; restaurant opened as Ober’s Restaurant Parisien; 1892
- Frank Locke’s Wine Rooms opened for business at Nos. 1 and 2 Winter
Place as competition for Ober; 1894 - Ober sold business
to Wood and Pollard, firm of wholesale liquor dealers; May 1894 -
acquired Wine Rooms from Locke's estate (died at 46); buildings combined
by breaking through wall separating Locke’s from Ober’s; renamed Winter
Place Tavern; 1898 - acquired by John Merrow, renamed The
Winter Place Hotel; went bankrupt; April 27, 1901 - Emil
Camus formed The Locke-Ober Company; secured services of Mr. J.B. Bailhe,
Ober's famous French chef for many years; 1981 -
restaurant finally recovered original Locke’s location in full;
2001 - acquired by Winter Place LLC; operated in same
configuration as in 1910 under Camus; second oldest restaurant in
Boston.
1883 - Johnny Heinold opened J.M.
Heinold's Saloon at foot of Webster Street in Oakland, CA; paid $100 for
former bunk house for men working nearby oyster beds; built from timbers
of an old whaling ship;1920's - ferry between Alameda (dry
town) and Oakland stopped next to Heinold's (commuter's First and Last
Chance for refreshment); name changed to Heinold's First and Last
Chance; referenced seventeen times in Jack London's novel John
Barleycorn.
May 1, 1886
- Angelo Del Monte, 'Papa' Marianetti opened Ristorante Fior d'Italia,
America's oldest Italian restaurant, in heart of San Francisco's North
Beach to serve clients of nearby bordello; 1893 - original
gold rush era building burned; restaurant grew to size that could seat
750, serve 1500 meals a day; Frank and George Marianetti (sons) took
over; sold to group (Sergio and Larry Nibbi, Charles Ramorino, Achille
Pantaleoni, Armanino); 1990 - acquired by Bob and Jinx
Larive, Hamish and Rosi Fordwood; February 15, 2005 -
fire destroyed restaurant; 2005 - moved to new location in
San Remo Hotel on Mason Street; Bob and Jinx Larive bought out other
partners.
1887 -
Peter Luger, German immigrant, opened steak house in Brooklyn;
1941 - Luger died, succeeded by son; 1950 -
acquired at auction (for price of the real estate) by Sol Forman, owner
of metalware business across street.
September 1, 1887
- Saugus Train Station dedicated; named for birthplace of Henry M.
Newhall in Massachusetts (Narragansett Indian term means sandy spit of
land); Joseph Herbert Tolfree started Saugus Eating House in north end
of depot; April 25, 1891 - President Benjamin Harrison had
a meal while on whistle stop re-election campaign; January
18, 1899 - acquired by Richard R. Wood, Southern Pacific
Railroad employee, and Martin Wood (brother), name changed to Saugus
Café; May 1903 - President Theodore Roosevelt had dinner;
1926 - Helen Wood married Bryon Cone, took over;
1936 - Fielding S. Wood took over management; 1974
- Fred Kane took over; 1979 - acquired by Steve Hwang;
November 1983 - closed due to financial difficulties; rescued by Fred
Kane; February 1, 1994 - acquired by Karen and David
Nardiello.
December 22, 1888 - Joseph V. Horn, Frank Hardart founded Horn & Hardart,
15-stool lunchroom, in Philadelphia, PA; 1898 -
incorporated as Horn & Hardart Baking Co.; 1902 -
opened first Automat ('waiterless') restaurant; grew to 84
stores in New York, Philadelphia; 1971 - filed for
bankruptcy; 1972 - acquired
Hanover House Industries, mail-order company in Hanover, PA; 1977 -
acquired by Barry Florescue, Burger King franchisee from Florida;
October 1991 - acquired by North American Resources, international
investment group; 1993 - name changed to Hanover Direct
(15 retail catalogs).
1894 - Frank Duarte brought
barrel of whiskey from Santa Cruz to establishment in Pescadero, CA;
price was ten cents for one whiskey, two bits for three; business
thrived until prohibition; 1934 - second generation
reopened bar; 1950s - third generation joined; 1961
- widow took over; mid-1980s - fourth generation arrived;
May 2003 - James Beard Foundation awarded Duarte's
honorary award as American Classic (one of five restaurants in United
States honored); 2007 - serve average of 13,000 people a
month; have grown from two employees in the fifties to sixty-five;
extensive menu focused on artichoke dishes, fresh fish, wine list of
over two hundred different labels.
1893 - Henry Schroeder opened
Schroeder's Restaurant on the south side of Market between First and
Second Streets in San Francisco; 1921 - his widow took
over; January 10, 1922 - acquired, sight unseen, by Max
Kniesche with gold pieces; 1935 - began serving dinner,
opened to ladies after 1:30 p.m.; 1959 - moved to present
locale at 240 Front Street; October 7, 1970 - opened to
ladies for lunch; April 1997 - acquired by Jana and Stefan
Filipclk, immigrants from Reichenberg, Czech Republic; oldest, largest
German restaurant on West Coast.
1898 -
Herman Joseph Berghoff opened Berghoff Cafe, to showcase his celebrated
Dortmunder-style beer, at corner of State and Adams Streets (Chicago,
IL); sold beer for a nickel, offered sandwiches for free; 1933
- Prohibition repealed, city issued liquor license No. 1 to Berghoff
(done so each year since); 1969 - separate men's only bar
ended; seven members of National Organization for Women sat at bar,
demanded service; got it; December
28, 2005 - third-generation announced Berghoff would close on
February 28, 2006.
June 9, 1902 - Horn & Hardart Automat Restaurant opened at
818 Chestnut Street in Philadelphia; first restaurant with vending
machine service; cavernous, waiterless establishment that was a
combination of fast-food, vending and a cafeteria; 1912 -
expanded to Manhattan; in 1912; first major fast-food chain with uniform
recipes, centralized commissary system of supplying their restaurants;
customers put nickels into slots, turned a knob, food revolved into
place in the compartment next to the slot for the customer to receive
through a small glass door.
1905 - Gennaro Lombardi opened America's first licensed
pizzeria in New York City.
1907 - Harley Hudson opened the Missouri Kitchen, a "quick-eats" lunch stand in
tent on Sherman Avenue in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho's main street; five
generations of Hudsons have continuously operated Hudson's Hamburgers
Restaurant; January 24, 2007 - Idaho state legislature
issued Proclamation "to recognize and honor an Idaho business and the
Hudson family for 100 years of business in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho".
1908 - Philippe Mathieu established Philippe The Original
in Southern California; 1918 - claimed distinction of
having created "French Dipped Sandwich"; 1927 - acquired
by Harry, Dave, Frank Martin for about $5,000; 1977 -
price of cup of coffee increased 100%, to a dime.
1911 - Harry Luby founded New England Dairy Lunch
cafeterias in Springfield, MO; 1920 - opened restaurant in
Waco, TX; 1934 - Robert M. Luby (son) established his
first Luby's Cafeteria at Dallas; 1959 - company
incorporated as Cafeterias, Incorporated, operated nine cafeterias in
Texas; 1981 - name changed to Luby's Cafeterias,
Incorporated; 1982 -operated sixty-three cafeterias,
mostly in Texas; 1990 - employed 9,500 workers at 175
locations in ten states; 1991 - George Hennard killed
twenty-three people, injured numerous others at Luby's Cafeteria in
Killeen, TX; 1987-1996 - over-expansion more than doubled
company's size, 226 restaurants in 11 states; pushed into bankruptcy,
March 1997 - president and CEO, John Edward Curtis Jr. (49),
committed suicide.
1916 - Nathan Handwerker opened nickel hot dog
stand on corner of Surf and Stillwell Avenues in Coney Island, New York;
served Coca Cola (Coca Cola's longest running chain customer);
July 4, 1916 - hosted first Nathan's Hot Dog Eating
Contest (Irish immigrant James Mullen ate13 hot dogs in buns in
12 minutes; 2007 winner, Joey Chestnut of San Jose, CA, ate 66 hot dogs
and buns in 12 minutes);
May 8, 1951 - registered "Nathan's Famous from a HOT-DOG
to a national HABIT" trademark first used January 1, 1915 (potato
chips); July 6, 1955 - stand sold one millionth hot dog;
1956 - opened second restaurant in Oceanside, Long Island;
1965 - opened third restaurant in Yonkers, NY; 1970
- went public; fourth restaurant in Times Square, New York City;
1975 - acquired Wetsons hamburger chain; 1991 -
opened first outlet in airport (Host Marriott operated newly designed
Nathan's kiosk concept at John F. Kennedy International Airport; now 52
airports served); 1998 - initiated hot dog branded-product
program (food service operators serve Nathan's hot dogs as branded
product on menus - now in more than 900 locations); 1999 -
acquired Kenny Rogers Roasters; 2000 -named official hot
dog of New York Yankees.
June 1919 - Roy Allen first brewed root beer in Lodi, CA
(based on formula purchased from pharmacist in Arizona); served it for
$.05 at parade honoring returning World War I veterans; 1922
- took on partner, Frank Wright, employee from original Lodi location;
formally named beverage, A&W Root Beer; started A&W Restaurants;
1923 - developed, opened nation’s first car hop service
restaurant;
1924 - Allen bought out Wright, began franchising (America's
first franchised restaurant chain); 1950 - over 450 A&W
restaurants operated nationwide; acquired by Gene Hurtz; formed the A&W
Root Beer Company; one of few nationally established drive-in restaurant
chains; 1960 - over 2,000 A&W restaurants; 1963 - acquired
by J. Hungerford Smith Company (manufactured A&W Root Beer concentrate
since 1921); 1966 - acquired by United Fruit (renamed
United Brands); 1971 - wholly owned subsidiary, A&W
Beverages, Inc., began selling A&W Root Beer at supermarkets (previously
only found at A&W restaurants); 1982 - A&W Restaurants,
Inc. acquired by A. Alfred Taubman, developer of shopping centers and
real estate; October 1993 -
A&W brands, excluding the
restaurants, acquired by Cadbury Beverages Inc.; December 1994 -
restaurants acquired by Sagittarius
Acquisitions, Incorporated (headed by former Executive Vice President of
Marketing for Burger King Corporation); March 1995 - Dr
Pepper/Seven-Up Companies, Inc. acquired by Cadbury Schweppes plc, of
London; A&W root beer became part of renamed Dr Pepper/Seven Up, Inc.
1999 - A&W Restaurants, Inc. acquired Long John Silver's,
Inc.; 2000 - Yorkshire Global Restaurants, Inc., became
parent company; 2002 - acquired by Tricon Global Restaurants, Inc.,
renamed Yum! Brands, Inc.
1921 - Edgar W. "Billy" Ingram, real estate and insurance
agent, borrowed $700, with partner/cook J. Walter Anderson, opened first
White Castle in Wichita, KS; offered hamburgers at $.05 a piece;
1933 - bought Anderson out; 2005 - more than
500,000,000 burgers sold; 2006 - more than 380
restaurants;.
1922 - Cousins Jack Kriendler and Charlie Berns opened
speakeasy, The Red Head, in NYC’s Greenwich Village to earn tuition for
night school (Jack was a pharmacy student at Fordham; Charlie studied at
NYU’s School of Commerce); 1923 - opened second speakeasy,
Club Fronton; 1928 - acquired house on West 52nd Street
(previously a bordello owned by Hildegarde Adler), spent next year
converting it to a speakeasy and restaurant; December 31,
1929/January 1, 1930 - opened "Jack and Charlie's '21' Club"
opened at 21 West 52nd Street in Manhattan; 1931 - model of British
Airways "flying boat" was first corporate toy hung from the '21'
ceiling; late 1930s - Jay Van Urk donated first jockey
(2004 - 33 jockeys; most recent from Sackatoga Stables representing,
Funny Cide, winner of 2003’s Kentucky Derby and Preakness races);
1944 - Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall get engaged at Table
30; 1985 - acquired by financier Marshall Cogan;
1995 - acquired by Orient-Express Hotels.
1925
- Howard Dearing Johnson (25) inherited small patent medicine store in
Wollaston, MA, and its debts, from his father; bought ice cream
recipe with 2x normal amount of butterfat = sales soared; 1928
- opened first restaurant;
1929 - opened another restaurant, in downtown Quincy, MA;
1935 - 25 Howard Johnson's roadside ice cream, sandwich
stands in Massachusetts (through franchsing); became leading tollroad
restaurant operator in country; 1954 - 400 restaurants,
entered lodging industry; opened first franchised motor lodge in
Savannah, GA; 1959 - Howard B. Johnson (son) assumed
control; 1961 - went public; 1965 - sales
exceeded combined sales of McDonald's, Burger King, Kentucky Fried
Chicken; second largest food feeder in U.S., second only to U.S. Army;
late 1970s -
over
1,000 restaurants, more than 500 motor lodges; 1980 - acquired by
British conglomerate Imperial Group for more than $630 million dollars;
1985 - acquired for its real estate by Marriott
Corporation (except "Ground Round" restaurant division); sold
motel/hotel/motor lodge system to Prime Motor Inns (today owned by
Cendant Corporation); 2005 - rights to Howard Johnson name
sold to newly-formed La Mancha Group, LLC.
1926 -
John E. Saxe, Thomas E. Saxe (son) started White Tower Hamburgers in
Milwaukee, WI; considered an imitator of White Castle (similar white
fortress-like structure); mid-1950s - 230 stores;
1970 - Brock Saxe (grandson) took over as president of White
Tower Management Corporation; 1976 - name changed to
Tobrock Corporation.
1935 - Prestley (20) and Curtis Blake (18) co-founded
Friendly's Ice Cream shop in Springfield, MA with $547 borrowed from
their parents; double dip cones for $0.05.
1936 - Bob Wian sold his car for $350.00, opened small
restaurant in Glendale, CA called called Bob’s Pantry; 1938
- name changed to Bob's Big Boy; 1940s - franchised the
concept; May 19, 1953 - Robert C. Wian Enterprises, Inc.
registered "Big Boy" trademark first used in December 1947 (hamburger
sandwiches); "double-deck" hamburger named for happy, chubby youngster
(about 6) who came into restaurant; 1967 - acquired by
Marriott Corp. for $7 million; 1987 - acquired by Fred,
Louis, John Elias, one of larger franchise operators (since 1951);
2000 - declared bankruptcy; 2001 - acquired by
Robert Liggett Jr., former radio station operator (Liggett Broadcast
Group); formed "Big Boy Restaurants, LLC".
July 13, 1937 - Vernon Carver Rudolph made, sold first
Krispy Kreme doughnuts at shop in Winston-Salem, NC (based on secret
yeast-raised doughnut recipe acquired in 1933 from French chef from New
Orleans); March 13, 1951 - Krispy Kreme Doughnut Company
registered "Krispy Kreme" trademark first used in August 1934 (doughnuts
and the mix for making same); 1962 - developed method to
extrude by air pressure from dough hopper to trays of continuous proof
box to form perfect doughnut shape; May 28, 1976 -
acquired by Beatrice Foods Company; February 28, 1982 -
acquired by group of franchisees; April 2000 - went
public; 2003 - stock prices near $50 (adjusted for
splits), nearly 400 Krispy Kreme stores produced nearly 3 billion
doughnuts a year.
August 4, 1938 - Sherb Noble ran "All the Ice Cream
You Can Eat for 10 Cents'' special" at Herb's, his walk-in ice cream store in Kankakee, IL; featured soft
frozen dairy product (soft-serve ice cream) created by J. F. ``Grandpa'' McCullough (67) and Alex (40, son) in
ice-cream mix plant business in
Green River, IL; dished out more than 1,600 servings of new dessert in 2
hours; June 22, 1940 - Noble opened first Dairy Queen
store in Joliet, IL; triple-decker cone was a nickel, sundae sold
for 8 cents; 1941 - McCulloughs opened second store in
Moline, IL; December 1941 - fewer than 10
Dairy Queen stores; 1947 - 100 stores; 1950
- 1,446 stores; 1955 - 2,600 stores; March 13, 1962
- McCullough's Dairy Queen registered "Dairy Queen" trademark first used
June 1940 (Machine for Freezing and Dispensing a Semi-Frozen Dairy
Product); 1962 - group of territory operators formed
International Dairy Queen Inc.; Hugh McCullough (Alex's son) sold stake
for $1.5 million; January 1998
- acquired by Berkshire Hathaway Inc.; 2007 - more than
5,900 restaurants in United States, Canada, 20 foreign countries.
1940 - Colonel Harlan Sanders created Original Kentucky
Fried Chicken Recipe (made honorary Colonel by Kentucky Governor Ruby
Laffoon in 1936 in recognition of his contributions to state's cuisine);
1952 - awarded Pete Harman of Salt Lake City with first
KFC franchise; handshake agreement stipulated payment of nickel to
Sanders for each chicken sold; 1957 - Kentucky Fried
Chicken first sold in buckets; 1960 - 190 KFC franchisees,
400 franchise units in U.S. and Canada; 1964 - Sanders
sold his interest in U.S. company for $2 million to a group of investors
headed by John Y. Brown Jr., future governor of Kentucky; remained
public spokesman for company; 1971 - More than 3,500
franchised and company-owned restaurants worldwide operation; acquired
by Heublein Inc.
January 16, 1945 - Carl (28) and Margaret Karcher opened full-service
restaurant, Carl’s Drive-In Barbeque, in Anaheim, CA (had owned,
operated hot dog carts since 1941); 1946 - added
hamburgers to menu; 1956 - opened first two Carl’s Jr.®
restaurants (junior versions of Carl’s original drive-in restaurant) in
Anaheim, nearby Brea; 1966 - incorporated Carl Karcher
Enterprises, Inc.; 1975 - more than 100 Carl’s Jr.
locations in Southern California; America's fourth largest burger chain;
1977 - first quick-service chain to offer salad bars in
all 200 locations; 1979 - sales exceeded the $100 million;
1981 - 300 restaurants in operation, went public;
1989 - sales topped $480 million at 534 restaurants; 1994
- became wholly-owned subsidiary of CKE Restaurants, Inc.; 1997
- acquired Hardee's Food Systems; 2006
-sales of $1.52 billion, 29,000 employees.
1945 - Irvine Robbins opened the Snowbird Ice Cream Store in
Glendale, CA; 1946 - Burton Baskin, brother-in-law, joined Robbins to
found Baskin-Robbins; 1953 - the big "31" sign made its debut at all
Baskin-Robbins stores, offering customers a different ice cream for
every day of the month; 1973 - acquired by J. Lyons & Co. (1978 -
acquired by Allied Domecq).
1946 -
Dave Barham opened first Hot Dog on a Stick at Muscle Beach, Santa
Monica, CA; 1990 - 60 stores operating in 12 states;
2006 - 105 company-owned U.S. locations plus 25 franchised
units; 100% owned and operated by its employees.
1946 -
Arthur J. Preston opened Preston's Candy & Ice Cream in Burlingame, CA;
winner of many international awards, including Grand Champion Medallion
of International Truffle Competition for three years in a row, numerous
awards in the Retail Confectioners International competition.
1948 -
Esther and Harry Snyder founded In-N-Out Burgers, West Coast
drive-through chain, in Baldwin park, CA (same year as McDonald brothers
opened first limited-menu fast-food restaurant in San Bernadino, CA (43
miles away); strategy: limited menu choices, fresh food, deliberately
slow growth (202 restaurants, $350 million annual sales vs. 31,886
restaurants, $20.4 billion annual sales for McDonalds).
December 12, 1948 - Richard and Maurice
McDonald opened drive -in restaurant in San Bernardino, CA; featured
hamburgers (15 cents), french fries (10 cents), fast service (Speedee
Service System); 1955 -
exclusive McDonald's
franchising
acquired by Ray Kroc.
1950 -
William Rosenberg changed name of "Open Kettle" restaurant in Quincy, MA
(founded 1948) to Dunkin' Donuts; 1955 - first franchise
established in Worcester, MA; February 2, 1960 -
Dunkin' Donuts of America, Inc. registered
"Dunkin' Donuts" trademark first used in May 1952 (doughnuts and
doughnut flour, fruit fillings for doughnuts, cookies, cakes and pies,
vegetable oil shortening and coffee); 1963 - 100th opened;
1979 - 1000th opened; 1982 - Fred the Baker, "Time
to Make the Donuts" television campaign began; 1990 -
acquired by Allied Domecq PLC; 1995 - 1000th international
shop opened; 2000 - opened 2000th shop worldwide;
2005 -
Pernod
Ricard, Fortune Brands acquired Allied
Domecq $14.2 billion; December 14, 2005
- Thomas H. Lee Partners, Carlyle Group, Bain Capital announced definitive agreement to acquire
Dunkin' Brands Inc. from Pernod Ricard SA $2.425 billion (12.8 times
cash flow); number one retailer of coffee-by-the-cup in America (nearly
one billion cups a year); largest coffee, baked goods chain in world
(more than 6,500 shops in 29 countries); 2006 -
worldwide system sales - $6.4 billion.
October 1950 - Marilyn and Harry
Lewis opened Sunset Strip cafe; evolved into Hamburger Hamlet, string of
show-biz-themed, carpet-and-chandelier grills in upper-midscale market;
1969 - went public; 1988 - 24-unit chain
(1987 sales of sales of $44.8 million) acquired by Weatherly Private
Capital Inc. for $33 million; December 6, 1995 - filed for
bankruptcy protection; 1997 - 14 restaurants acquired by
Koo Koo Roo, Inc. for$11.45 million; 1998 - Koo Koo Roo
Enterprises, Family Restaurant Group, Restaurant Enterprises Group Inc.
merged, formed Prandium Inc.; May 2002 - filed for
bankruptcy protection; July 2002 - emerged from
bankruptcy; October 8, 2003 - filed for bankruptcy;
2004 - 12-unit Hamlet Group chain acquired by Andrew Tavakoli
for $10 million.
1953 -
Bob Evans formed Bob Evans Farms Inc. with five friends, relatives;
1962 - first restaurant, The Sausage Shop, 12-stool
diner in Gallipolis, OH; 2006 - sales of $1.7 billion, 579
restaurants in 18 states.
1953 - Harold Butler opened
Danny's Donuts in Lakewood, CA; 1954 - renamed Danny's
Coffee Shops; 1959 - renamed Denny’s Restaurants (sued by
Coffee Dan's chain over brand-name similarity), with 20 Denny’s serving
customers by year’s end.
1954 - James McLamore, David
Edgerton founded Burger King Corporation in Miami, FL; hamburger cost
18¢; 1957 - WHOPPER® sandwich introduced, cost 37¢;
1961 - operating 45 restaurants throughout Florida and the
Southeast; McLamore and Edgerton acquired national franchise
rights for the Company.
April 15, 1955 - Ray Kroc opened first franchised
McDonald's in Des Plaines, IL after having bought exclusive
franchising rights from Richard and Maurice McDonald of San Bernadino, CA
(first day's sales: $366.12);
1961 - 228 McDonald's
franchises, generated $37 million in gross profits; bought out McDonald brothers for $2.7
million;
1963
- Ronald McDonald made debut as corporate spokesclown;
1965
- McDonald's went public at $22.50 a share; split 12
times in next 35 years;
1975
- first drive-through window;
2000
- sales in U.S. peaked at average of
$1.6 million annually per restaurant.
1957 - Dan Carney read article from the Saturday
Evening Post about pizza fad on college campuses, shown to him by
landlady of Carney family's grocery store and small beer bar right next
door (she wanted to get out of bar business); 1958 - Dan
and Frank Carney borrowed $600 from their mother, remodeled tavern next
door to family market, opened first Pizza Hut in Wichita, KS;
first sign had room for only nine letters, including "pizza"; chose
"hut" because facility shaped like one; 1959 - five
stores, 310 stores in first decade; 1964 - basic
free-standing design of standardized Pizza Hut restaurants opened;
1977 - 3,400 domestic and international stores; acquired by
PepsiCo. for $300 million; 1997 - spun off into Tricon;
May 16, 2002 - Tricon officially became YUM! Brands.
1958 - Al Lapin opened first International House of
Pancakes in Toluca Lake, CA; 1960 - began expansion
through franchising; 1961 - went public; 1963
- adopted name International Industries; March 23, 1965 -
International Industries, Inc. registered "International House of
Pancakes" trademark first used February 26, 1960 (restaurant services);
1973 - acronym IHOP introduced; July 16, 1974
- International Industries, Inc. registered "IHOP" trademark first used
November 1972 (restaurant services); 1992 - 500th IHOP
opened; 1993 - average sales per IHOP exceeded $1 million;
1998 - system wide sales exceeded $1 billion; 2001
- 1,000th IHOP opened; July 16, 2007 - said it would pay
$1.9 billion for Applebee's International, casual dining chain of
restaurants.
1958 - David Tallichet opened The Reef, South
Seas-inspired waterfront restaurant, on edge of harbor in Long Beach,
CA; pioneered theme restaurants, founded multi-concept restaurant
company, Specialty Restaurants Corp.; 1968 - went public;
1980 - sales peaked at $180 million; went private; 1993 -
filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy (operated 50 restaurants); 2007
- operated 25 restaurants.
August 22, 1958 - Ben and Virginia Ali opened Ben’s Chili
Bowl on U St. ("Black Broadway") in Washington, DC; used $5,000,
renovated 1909 building (former Minnehaha Theater); frequented by Duke
Ellington, Miles Davis, Bessie Smith, Ella Fitzgerald, Cab Calloway, Nat
King Cole, Redd Foxx, Dick Gregory, Martin Luther King Jr., Bill Cosby;
May 2001 - Ben and Virginia inducted into DC Hall of Fame
1960 - Tom Monaghan and his brother James
borrowed $500 to buy "DomiNick's,"
a pizza store in Ypsilanti, MI; 1961 - James trades
his half of the business to Tom for a Volkswagen Beetle; 1965
- Tom Monaghan is sole owner of company, renamed business "Domino's
Pizza, Inc." 1967 - first Domino's Pizza franchise store
opened in Ypsilanti, MI; 1968 - first Domino's store
outside of Michigan opens in Burlington, VT; 1978 - 200th
Domino's store opened; 1983 - 1,000th Domino's store
opened; 1985 - opened 954 units, for a total of 2,841;
Domino's fastest-growing pizza company in country; 1989 -
Domino's opened 5,000th store; 1990 - Domino's Pizza
signed its 1,000th franchise; 1998 -
Monaghan retired, sold 93% of Company to Bain Capital, Inc.;
1999 - worldwide sales exceed $3.36 billion.
September 3, 1960 - Wilbur Hardee founded Hardee's
restaurant chain with drive-in hamburger stand near East Carolina
University campus in Greenville, NC; no tables, no waiters, 15-cent
fresh-ground, lean beef burger made to order on custom-build charcoal
broiler; May 5, 1961 - Jim Gardner, Leonard Rawl to opened
first Hardee's franchise restaurant in Rocky Mount, NC; November
20, 1962 - Hardee's Food Systems, Inc. registered "Hardee's"
trademark first used October 21, 1961 (restaurant services); 1963
- went public; introduced pagoda-style building; Hardee lost 51%
controlling interest in company in card game with Gardener, Rawl; sold
remaining stake for $37,000; 1981 - acquired by Imasco
Ltd. (Canadaian conglomerate); became nation’s fourth-largest burger
quick-service restaurant chain; 1997 - acquired by Carl's,
Jr. (became CKE Restaurants, Inc.); 2008 - 1,900 Hardee's
across Midwest, Southeast, 200 international locations.
April 21, 1962 - President John F. Kennedy opened first
revolving restaurant in U.S., "Top of the Needle", Seattle, WA, by
remote control Palm Beach, FL; originally called "Eye of the Needle", on
top of "The Space Cage"; unmatched in its 360° panoramic view of Seattle
skyline, Puget Sound; 2000 - re-opened as SkyCity, larger
restaurant, rotated 360 degrees in exactly forty-seven minutes.
1964 - Tim Horton, legend in National Hockey League, sold
first Tim Hortons franchise, on Ottawa Street in Hamilton, ON,
to Ron Joyce, former police officer; offered only two products – coffee, donuts; 1967 - Joyce became full partner; 1975
- Joyce became sole owner (Horton died in traffic accident); 40 stores;
1976 - introduced Timbit (bite-sized donut hole); grew
into largest quick service restaurant chain in Canada; February
1987 - opened 300th store in Calgary, AB; 1995 -
merged with Wendy’s International, Inc.; 95% franchise owned, operated;
1997 - 1500th store opened in Pickerington, OH;
December 2000 - 2000th store opened in Toronto, ON;
September 29, 2006 - spun off as a separate company;
December 2006 - 3000th store opened in Orchard Park, NY.
July 23, 1964 - Leroy and Forrest Raffel opened Arby’s (R.B.,
initials of Raffel Brothers) Roast Beef Restaurant in Boardman, OH;
1970s - added average of 50 restaurants a year; 1981
- opened 1,000th restaurant; 1993 - acquired by Triarc
Companies, Inc.; July 25, 2005 - Triarc acquired RTM
Restaurant Group, Arby’s largest franchisee, formed Arby’s Restaurant
Group, Inc. (more than 3,500 restaurants).
1965 - Ruth Fertel, divorced mother raising two sons,
mortgaged her New Orleans home for $22,000, bought Chris's Steak House;
renamed it Ruth's Chris Steak House; 1976 - original
Ruth's Chris Steak House destroyed in a fire; 1977 -
opened second restaurant in Metairie, LA; granted first franchise for a
Ruth's Chris Steak House in Baton Rouge; 1999 - sold chain
for $160 million to private equity firm; August 9, 2005 -
IPO gave company market capitalization of $400 million.
August 14, 1956
- Federal Nut Co., Inc. registered
"Chock Full O' Nuts-The Heavenly Coffee"
trademark first used July 1, 1953 (coffee).
1966 - Norm Brinker founded Steak & Ale restaurants;
1976 - acquired by Pillsbury; 1983 - bought Chili's;
1990 - renamed Brinker International.
1968 - Bill Darden opened first Red Lobster in Lakeland,
FL; 1995 - together with Olive Garden, Bahama Breeze
became part of Darden Restaurants; 2007 - close to 700 Red
Lobster locations in United States, Canada.
1968 - McDonald's introduced Big Mac;
created by Jim Delligatti (operated dozed McDonald's in Pittsburgh
area).
November 15, 1969 - Dave Thomas opened first Wendy's
Old-Fashioned Hamburgers outlet in downtown Columbus, OH; named for
8-year-olld daughter, Melinda Lo, nicknamed, Wendy; August
1972 - first franchise sold; March 2, 2007 - original restaurant
closed.
August 28, 1971 - Alice Waters opened Chez Panisse Restaurant in
Berkeley, CA; started an organic food movement.
1973 -
McDonald's introduced Egg McMuffin;
created by Herb Peterson (operated Santa Barbara McDonald's); used
teflon-coated ring to make round eggs.
1979 -
McDonald's introduced Happy Meal;
created by Bob Charles, Colorado franchisee); added toy to children's
orders.
1979 - Tim and Nina Zagat published 2-page typed list of
New York restaurants compiled from reviews from friends; delivered to
bookstores which would stock it; 2000 - third of company
acquired by investment group led by General Atlantic Partners (valued
company qt $100 million); 2007 - sold 5.5 million guides
in more than 100 countries, 1.5 million registered web site users.
February 1982 - Austrian-born Wolfgang Puck opened Spago
(Italian for string) on Sunset Strip in West Hollywood to serve simple,
fresh, innovative food by skilled, friendly staff in casually
sophisticated yet comfortable environment (former part owner of Ma
Maison, magnet for Hollywood’s rich and famous); first signature dish,
gourmet pizza topped with smoked salmon and caviar, put restaurant Los
Angeles foodie map; 1986 - regularly featured guest on
ABC's "Good Morning America"; 1990 - Spgao grossing $6
million per year ;1997 - Spago Beverly Hills opened;
2000 - Emmy-winning television series, "Wolfgang Puck,"
debuted on Food Network (aired for five seasons).
March 2, 1984 - first McDonald's franchise closed
-- in Des Plaines, IL.
June 6, 1986 - Ronn Teitelbaum opened first Johnny Rockets on Melrose
Avenue, Los Angeles; June 3, 2005 - 175th restaurant
opened in Hicksville, New York.
January 31, 1990 -
McDonald's Corp. opened first fast-food
restaurant in Moscow; throngs lined up to pay equivalent of several
days' wages for Big Macs, shakes, french fries.
April 10, 1991 - Last automat (coin operated cafeteria)
closes (3rd and 42nd St, New York City).
April 23, 1992 -
McDonald's opened its first restaurant in Beijing.
December 7, 2006
- Rank Group PLC agreed to sell Hard Rock cafes, including massive
collection of rock 'n' roll memorabilia, for $965 million to Seminole
Tribe of Florida (124 Hard Rock Cafes, four Hard Rock Hotels, two Hard
Rock Casino Hotels, two Hard Rock Live! concert venues, stakes in three
unbranded hotels); Seminoles own, operate five other casinos in Florida;
90 percent of the tribe's budget comes from gaming revenue.
March 2008 - Restaurant traffic
does not always fall during a recession (NPD Group):

April 24, 2008
- Wendy's International Inc. signed $2.3 billion merger agreement with
Triarc Companies Inc., franchisers of the Arby's restaurant system;
created third largest quick-service restaurant chain in U.S., with
approximately $12.5 billion in annual sales, more than 10,000 units;
Triarc changed name to incorporate Wendy's.
(21 Club), H. Peter Kriendler with H. Paul Jeffers (1999).
"21":
Every Day Was New Year's Eve: Memoirs of a Saloon Keeper (Dallas,
TX: Taylor Publ. Co., 282 p.). Younger Brother of Jack Kriendler, co-founder. 21 (Restaurant : New York)--History; Cookery;
Restaurants--New York (State)--New York.
(A.P.V. Company), G. A. Dummett (1981).
From Little Acorns: A
History of the A.P.V. Company Limited. (London,UK: Hutchinson
Benham, 247 p.). A.P.V. Company--History; Food processing machinery
industry--Great Britain--History; Chemical plant equipment
industry--Great Britain--History.
(All American Hot Dog Company), Louis Di Raimondo, John C. Havens
(2004).
I'm On A Roll: America's Celebrity Hot Dog King, Louie Di Raimondo.
(Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, 116 p.). Founder and President of the All
American Hot Dog Company. Di Raimondo, Louis; Hot dog
stands--Florida--Miami.
(Arby's), Whit Smyth (1999).
Great Taste Endures: 35 Years of
Success: The Story of Arby's Restaurants. (New York,. NY: Lebhar-Friedman
Books, 126 p.). Raffel, Leroy; Raffel, Forrest; Arby's, Inc.--History;
Franchises (Retail trade); Restaurateurs--United States.
(Baker Perkins Holdings Ltd.), Augustus Muir (1968).
The History
of Baker Perkins. (Cambridge, UK: Heffer, 214 p.). Baker Perkins
Holdings, ltd.; Restaurant Supplies; Restaurants and Foodservice; Food
and Beverage.
(Barjo Restaurant), J. Emily Foster (2001).
The Legend of Barjo Restaurant: The Life of Josephine McAllister Stone.
(Lisbon Falls, ME: Soleil Press, 416 p.). Stone, Josephine McAllister,
1903- ; Restaurateurs--Maine--Norway--Biography; Family--Maine;
Women--Biography; Norway (Me.)--History.
(Benihana), Jack McCallum (1985).
Making It in America: The Life
and Times of Rocky Aoki, Benihana's Pioneer. (New York, NY: Dodd,
Mead, 165 p.). Aoki, Rocky, 1938- ;Restaurateurs--United
States--Biography.
(Ben’s Chili Bowl), Tracey Gold Bennett, Nizam Ben Ali (2008).
Ben’s Chili Bowl: 50 years of a Washington, D.C. Landmark.
(Charleston, SC: Arcadia Pub.. 128 p.). Son of founder. Ben’s Chili
Bowl; Ali, Virginia and Ben; Restaurants -- Washington, DC.
August 22, 1958 - West Indian immigrant Mahaboob
Ben Ali, Virginia Rollins (fiancée) opened hot dog, chili shop on U
Street in Washington, DC; 50-year history of Ben’s Chili Bowl, U
Street, Ali family, patrons.
(Bewley's Cafés Limited), Fiona Murdoch (2002).
Victor Bewley's Memoirs. (Dublin, IR: Veritas Publications,
112 p.). Bewley, Victor; Bewley's Cafés Limited;
Restaurateurs--Ireland--Biography; Quakers--Ireland--Biography.
(Blanchard's Restaurant), Bob and Melinda Blanchard (2005).
Live What You Love: Notes from an Unusual Life. (New York, NY:
Sterling Pub., 216 p.). Owners, Blanchard's Restaurant (Anguilla).
Blanchard, Robert, 1951- ; Blanchard, Melinda, 1952- ;
Entrepreneurs--United States--Biography; Entrepreneurs--Anguilla--Biography;
Restaurateurs--Anguilla--Biography; Conduct of life;
Vermont--Biography; Anguilla--Biography.
(Blimpie), Tony Conza (2000).
Success, It's a Beautiful Thing:
Lessons on Life and Business from the Founder of Blimpie International
(New York, NY: Wiley, 256 p.). Founder, Blimpie International. Conza,
Tony; Success in business; Businessmen -- United States -- Biography;
Restaurateurs -- United States -- Biography.
(Boost), James Kirby (2005).
Janine Allis: Business Secrets of the Woman Behind Boost Juice.
(Milton, Queensland: Wiley, 125 p.). Allis, Janine, 1965- ; Boost
(Firm)--History; Fast food restaurants--Australia;
Businesswomen--Australia--Biography; Franchises (Retail
trade)--Australia; Success in business--Australia.
(Brinker International), Norman Brinker and Donald T. Phillips
(1996).
On The Brink: The Life and Leadership of Norman Brinker.
(Arlington, TX: Summit Publishing Group, 203 p.). Restaurateur. Norman
Brinker, Restaurants.
(Burger King), James W. McLamore (1998).
The Burger King: Jim
McLamore and the Building of an Empire. (New York, NY: McGraw-Hill,
286 p.). McLamore, James W., 1926-1996; Burger King Corporation;
Restaurateurs--United States--Biography.
(Carnegie Deli), Milton Parker, Allyn Freeman (2005).
How To Feed
Friends and Influence People: The Carnegie Deli-- A Giant Sandwich, a
Little Deli, a Huge Success. (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 192 p.). Carnegie
Deli (Restaurant); Cookery, Jewish.
(Chez Panisse), Thomas McNamee; foreword by R.W. Apple, Jr. (2007).
Alice Waters & Chez Panisse: The Romantic, Impractical, Often Eccentric,
Ultimately Brilliant Making of a Food Revolution. (New York, NY:
Penguin Press, 380 p.). Waters, Alice; Chez Panisse;
Restaurateurs--United States--Biography; Women cooks--United
States--Biography. Biography of Alice Waters and
the San Francisco 1970s counterculture food revolution that invented
"American cuisine."
(Chick-Fil-A), S. Truett Cathy (1989). It's Easier to Succeed Than
To Fail. (Nashville, TN: Oliver-Nelson, 192 p.). Cathy, S. Truett;
Chick-Fil-A Corporation--History; Businesspeople--United
States--Biography; Fast food restaurants--United States--History.
Introduced chicken sandwich concept to quick-service industry.
(Chick-Fil-A), S. Truett Cathy (2002).
Eat Mor Chikin: Inspire More People. (Decatur, GA: Looking Glass
Books, 200 p.). Cathy, S. Truett; Chick-Fil-A Corporation--History;
Restaurateurs--United States--Biography; Fast food restaurants--United
States--History.
(CKE Restaurants, Inc.), Carl N. Karcher with B. Carolyn Knight
Karcher (1991). Never Stop Dreaming: Fifty Years of Making it Happen.
(San Marcos, CA: Robert Erdmann Publ. Karcher, Carl Nicholas; CKE
Restaurants, Inc.
(Coach & Horses ), Norman Balon with Spencer Bright (1991).
You're Barred, You Bastards! (London, UK: Sidgwick & Jackson,
184 p.). Balon, Norman, 1927- ; Coach & Horses (Bar)--History;
Restaurateurs--England--London--Biography.
(Coffee Republic), Sahar and Bobby Hashemi (2004).
Anyone Can Do
It: Building Coffee Republic from Our Kitchen Table: 57 Real-Life Laws
on Entrepreneurship. (Chichester, West Sussex, UK: Capstone, 198 p.
[orig. pub. 2002]). Coffee Republic (Firm) History; Coffeehouses Great
Britain History; Coffeehouses Great Britain Management; New business
enterprises Great Britain.
(Copacabana), Kristin Baggelaar (2006).
The Copacabana. (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Pub., 128 p.).
Copacabana (Night club : New York, N.Y.)--Pictorial works;
Entertainers--United States--Portraits.
Manhattan's
best-known night club, most popular nightspot in America.
(Copacabana), Mickey Podell-Raber with Charles Pignone (10/1/2007).
The Copa: Jules Podell and the Hottest Club North of Havana.
(New York, NY: Collins, 256 p.). Daughter of longtime Copacabana owner
Jules Podell. Copacabana (Night club : New York, NY); Music-halls
(Variety-theaters, cabarets, etc.)--New York (State)--New
York--History--20th century. History of Jules Podell's legendary club
Copacabana; Russian immigrant dropped out of fourth grade to make money
for his family, created number one destination for rich, famous,
dangerous of New York.
(D & E Restaurant), Erlinda Enriquez Panlilio (2000).
Teacher to Tycoon: The Life and Times of Trinidad Diaz Enriquez.
(Pasig City, Philippines: Anvil Pub., 309 p.). Enriquez, Trinidad Diaz,
1908- ; Hotelkeepers--Philippines--Biography;
Restaurateurs--Philippines--Biography.
(Daniel), Leslie Brenner (2002).
The Fourth Star: Dispatches from
Inside Daniel Boulud's Celebrated New York Restaurant. (New York,
NY: Clarkson Potter, 314 p.). Food Writer. Boulud, Daniel; Daniel
(Restaurant).
(Dairy Queen), Caroline H. Otis (1990).
The Cone with the Curl on Top: Celebrating Fifty Years 1940-1990.
(Minneapolis, MN: International Dairy Queen, 160 p.). International
Dairy Queen, Inc.--History; Ice cream industry--United States--History.
(Delmonico's), Robert V.P. Steele (1967). Delmonico's.
(Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin, 374 p.). Delmonico's.
(Denny's), Jim Adamson with Rosemary Bray McNatt and Robert McNatt
(2000).
The Denny's Story: How a Company in Crisis Resurrected Its
Good Name and Reputation (New York, NY: Wiley, 205 p.).
Denny's, Inc.
(Domino's Pizza), Tom Monaghan with Robert Anderson (1986).
Pizza
Tiger. (New York, NY: Random House, 346 p.). Monaghan, Tom, 1937- ;
Domino's Pizza (Firm); Restaurateurs--United States--Biography.
(Dunkin' Donuts), William Rosenberg with Jessica Brilliant Keener
(2001).
Time To Make the Donuts. (New York, NY: Lebhar-Friedman
Books, 255 p.). Founder, Dunkin' Donuts. Rosenberg, William, 1916- ;
Dunkin' Donuts (Firm) Biography; Dunkin' Donuts (Firm) History;
Restaurateurs United States Biography.; Businesspeople United States
Biography; Entrepreneurship United States; Franchises (Retail trade)
United States History.
(Elaine's), A.E. Hotchner (2004).
Everyone Comes to Elaine's:
Forty Years of Neighborhood Regulars, Movie Stars, All-Stars, Literary
Lions, Financial Scions, Top Cops, Politicians, and Power Brokers at the
Legendary Hot Spot. (New York, NY: Harper Entertainment, 256 p.). A
Regular at Elaine's. Kaufman, Elaine; Elaine's Restaurant (New York,
N.Y.).
(Falls), David Blum (1992).
Flash in the Pan: The Life and Death of an American Restaurant.
(New York, NY: Simon and Schuster, 302 p.). Falls (Restaurant).
(Fior d'Italia), Francine Brevetti; Foreword by John T. Lescroart
(2005).
The Fabulous Fior - Over 100 Years in an Italian Kitchen.
(Nevada City, CA: San Francisco Bay Books, 170 p.). Granddaughter of
Waiter (Alberto Puccetti) at the Fior d'Italia a Century Ago. Fior
d'Italia; Italian cookery; San Francisco--restaurants.
(Four Seasons), John Mariani with Alex Von Bidder (1994).
The Four
Seasons: A History of America's Premier Restaurant
(New York, NY:
Crown, 205 p.). Four Seasons (Restaurant)--History.
(Fuddrucker's), Phil Romano with Steve McLinden (2005).
Food for Thought: How the Creator of Fuddrucker's, Romano's Macaroni
Grill, and Eatzi's Built a $10 Billion Empire One Concept at a Time.
(Chicago, IL: Dearborn Financial Pub., 224 p.). Restaurateur. Romano,
Phil; Restaurateurs--Biography.
(Galatoire’s Restaurant), Marda Burton & Kenneth Holditch (2004).
Galatoire’s: Biography of a Bistro. (Athens, GA: Hill Street
Press, 229 p.). Freelance Travel Journalist; Professor Emeritus
(University of New Orleans). Galatoire’s Restaurant.
(Golden Ball Tavern), Howard Gambrill, Jr., and Charles Hambrick-Stowe;
introd. by Marley Brown (1977).
The Tavern and the Tory: The Story of
the Golden Ball Tavern (Weston, MA: Golden Ball Tavern Trust,
103 p.).
Jones, Isaac, 1728-1813; Weston, Mass. Golden Ball Tavern;
Merchants--Massachusetts--Weston--Biography; Weston (Mass.)--Biography.
(Great Race Pizza Shoppe), Robert P. Welsh (1993).
3 Pies Hot!: A Race to Nowhere (Columbus, OH: Glass Onion
Publications, 272 p.). Great Race Pizza Shoppe, Inc.; Restaurant
management--Ohio; Pizza--Ohio.
(Green & Black’s), Craig Sams and Josephine Fairley (2008).
Sweet Dreams: The Story of Green & Black’s. (London, UK: Random
House Business Books, 260 p.). Founders (husband, wife).
1991 - Craig Sams, Jo Fairley launched organic chocolate bar; created name in 10
minutes ("Green" for organic button, "Black" for darkness created by high
cocoa content); became $100 million brand; 2003 - new investors, 5% stake acquired by Cadbury; 2005 - full control
acquired by Cadbury.
(Green Papaya), Lien Yeomans (2001).
Green Papaya: New Fruit from Old Seeds: How I Seduced Australia with My
Food. (Milsons Point, NSW: Random House Australia, 222 p.).
Yeomans, Lien; Green Papaya (Restaurant);
Restaurateurs--Australia--Biography; Women cooks--Australia--Biography;
Cookery, Vietnamese.
(Hamburger Hamlets Inc.), Marilyn Lewis (2000).
"Marilyn, Are You Sure You Can Cook?" He Asked: A Memoir.
(Berkeley, CA: Ten Speed Press, 224 p.). Lewis, Marilyn, 1929- ; Restaurateurs--United States--Biography; Cookery, American.
(Hardee's), Wilber Hardee (2000).
Life and Times of Wilber Hardee: Founder of Hardee's. (Omaha,
NE: iUniverse, 148 p.). Hardee, Wilber; Hardee's; fast food
restaurants--United States.
(Harry’s Bar), Arrigo Cipriani (1996).
Harry’s Bar: The Life and Times of the Legendary Venice Landmark.
(New York, NY: Arcade Pub., 188 p.). Harry’s Bar (Venice,
Italy)--History; Cookery, Italian; Celebrities--Social life and customs.
Founded 1931, located just off the Palazzo San
Marco.
(Fred Harvey), Lesley Poling-Kempes (1989).
The Harvey Girls:
Women Who Opened the West. (New York, NY: Paragon House, 252 p.).
Fred Harvey (Firm)--History; Waitresses--Southwest, New--History;
Women--Southwest, New--History; Tourism--Southwest, New--History;
Southwest, New--History--1848-; Southwest, New--Social conditions.
(Fred Harvey), Kathleen L. Howard and Diana F. Pardue; in cooperation
with the Heard Museum; foreword by Martin Sullivan (1996).
Inventing
the Southwest: The Fred Harvey Company and Native American Art.
(Flagstaff, AZ: Northland Pub., 150 p.). Fred Harvey (Firm)--History;
Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railway Company--History; Indian
art--Southwest, New--History; Pueblo art--History; Tourism--Southwest,
New--History.
(Harvey Fred), Edited by Marta Weigle and Barbara A. Babcock (1996).
The Great Southwest of the Fred Harvey Company and the Santa Fe Railway.
(Phoenix, AZ: Heard Museum, 254 p.). Fred Harvey (Firm) --History;
Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railway Company --History; Pueblo art
--History; Pueblo Indians --Industries; Indian art --Southwest, New
--History; Tourism --Southwest, New --History; Indian Art --Collectors
and collecting --Southwest, New; Southwest, New --History --1848-.
Produced in connection with exhibit ’Inventing the
Southwest: The Fred Harvey Company and Native American Art,’ curated by
Diana Pardue and Kathleen Howard".
(Horn & Hardart), Lorraine B. Diehl and Marianne Hardart (2002).
The Automat: The History, Recipes, and Allure of the Art Deco
Masterpieces. (New York, NY: Clarkson/Potter, p.). Vending machines.
(Iron Horse Restaurant), Marilyn Pearsol Giorgetti (2005).
From the Horse's Mouth: A Memoir of San Francisco's Legendary Iron Horse
Restaurant, Its Charismatic Owner, and the Giorgetti Family.
(Philadelphia, PA: Xlibris Corp., 128 p.). Iron Horse Restaurant; San
Francisco restaurants.
(Jockey), Lorenzo Diaz (1996).
Jockey, Historia de un Restaurante. (Barcelona, Spain: Tusquets
Editores, 260 p.). Jockey (Restaurant : Madrid, Spain)--History.
(Carl Karcher), B. Carolyn Knight (1981).
Making It Happen: The
Story of Carl Karcher Enterprises. (Anaheim, CA: C. Karcher
Enterprises, 143 p.). Karcher, Carl Nicholas; Carl Karcher Enterprises;
Restaurateurs--United States--Biography.
(KFC), Edward G. Klemm, Jr. (1980).
Claudia, The Story of Colonel
Harland Sanders' Wife. (Los Angeles, CA: Crescent Publications, 95
p.). Sanders, Harland, 1890- ; Sanders, Claudia, 1902- ;
Restaurateurs--Kentucky--Biography; Wives--Kentucky--Biography.
(KFC), John Ed Pearce (1982).
The Colonel: The Captivating
Biography of the Dynamic Founder of a Fast-Food Empire. (Garden
City, NY: Doubleday, 225 p.). Sanders, Harland, 1890- ;
Restaurateurs--Kentucky--Biography.
(KFC), Robert Darden (2002).
Secret Recipe: Why KFC Is Still
Cookin' After 50 Years. (Dallas, TX: Tapestry Press,
p.). Kentucky Fried Chicken (Firm); Restaurant management.
(KFC), Bill Carey (2005).
Master of the Big Board: The Life, Times, and Businesses of Jack C.
Massey. (Nashville, TN: Cumberland House, 285 p.). Massey, Jack
C., 1904-1990; Businessmen --United States --Biography; Capitalists and
financiers --United States --Biography.
Only person ever to take three
companies to New York Stock Exchange; 1964 - bought
Harland Sanders's recipe, grew KFC into nationwide chain of restaurants; s1968
- tarted Hospital Corporation of America, chain of for-profit hospitals.
(Krispy Kreme), Kirk Kazanjian & Amy Joyner; foreword by Dick Clark
(2004).
Making Dough: The 12 Secret Ingredients of Krispy Kreme's
Sweet Success. (Hoboken, NJ: Wiley, 222 p.). Television News
Anchor/Business Reporter; Business Reporter (News & Record in North
Carolina). Krispy Kreme Doughnuts; Baked products industry United States
Case studies.
(La Cote d'Or), William Echikson (1995).
Burgundy Stars: A Year in
the Life of a Great French Restaurant. (Boston, MA: Little, Brown,
311 p.). Loiseau, Bernard, 1951-; La Côte d'Or (Restaurant);
Cooks--France--Biography; Burgundy (France)--Social life and customs.
(La Cote d'Or), Rudolph Chelminski (2005).
The Perfectionist: Life
and Death in Haute Cuisine. (New York, NY: Gotham, 528 p.). Loiseau,
Bernard, 1951-; Cooks--France--Biography; Gastronomy.
(Le Cirque), Sirio Maccioni and Peter J. Elliott (2004).
Sirio:
The Story of My Life and Le Cirque. (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons,
432 p.,). Maccioni, Sirio; Le Cirque (Restaurant); Restaurateurs--United
States--Biography.
(Lil' Orbits Inc.), Ed Anderson (1998).
Climbing Jacob's Ladder to
Wealth & Success: The Making of a Millionaire. (Lakeville, MN: Galde
Press, 190 p.). Mini-Donut King. Anderson, Ed., 1931- ;
Businessmen--United States--Biography; Entrepreneurship--Biography; New
business enterprises--United States--Management.
(Locke-Ober), Ned and Pam Bradford (1978).
Boston's Locke-Ober
Café: An Illustrated Social History with Miscellaneous Recipes (New
York, NY: Atheneum, 207 p.). Locke-Ober Café (Boston, Mass.).
(Lomando Locatelli), Tony Allan (2006).
Making Good: The Inspiring Story of Serial Entrepreneur, Maverick and
Restaurateur. (London, UK: Capstone, 240 p.). Britain's Second
Wealthiest Restaurateur. Lomando Locatelli.
Allan, Tony; Restaurants -- London; Entrepreneurs--London--Biography.
Meteoric rise from fishmonger to elite of British
entrepreneurs; what Tony Allan did, why he did it the way he did; genuine rags-to-riches
story.
(Luby’s Cafeterias Inc.), Carol Dawson and Carol Johnston (2006).
House of Plenty The Rise, Fall, and Revival of Luby’s Cafeterias.
(Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 288 p.). Writer; Only
Granddaughter of Lola Luby Johnston, Only Child of Luby's Cofounder and
Corporate Executive Charles R. Johnston and Gertrude Johnston. Luby’s Cafeterias,
Inc.--History; Cafeterias--United States--History.
Cafeteria empire that by the 1980s had revenues second only to
McDonald's; financial failure during 1990s with
non-family leadership, struggle back to solvency.
(Lucky Dogs Inc.), Jerry E. Strahan (1998).
Managing Ignatius: The
Lunacy of Lucky Dogs and Life in the Quarter. (Baton Rouge, LA:
Louisiana State University Press, 237 p.). Strahan, Jerry E., 1951- ;
Talbot, Doug; Lucky Dogs, Inc.--History; Hot dog stands--Louisiana--New
Orleans; New Orleans (La.)--Social life and customs.
(Lundy's), Robert Cornfield ; with recipes and food notes by Kathy
Gunst (1998).
Lundy's: Reminiscences and Recipes from Brooklyn's
Legendary Restaurant. (New York, NY: HarperCollins, 204 p.). Lundy's
(Restaurant)--History; Cookery (Seafood).
(Lutece), Irene Daria (1993).
Lutèce: A Day in the Life of
America's Greatest Restaurant. (New York, NY: Random House, 230 p.).
Lutèce (Restaurant : New York, N.Y.); Restaurants--New York (State)--New
York.
(McDonald's), Max Boas and Steve Chain (1976).
Big Mac: The
Unauthorized Story of McDonald's (New York, NY: Dutton, 212 p.).
McDonald's Corporation.
(McDonald's), Edited by Marshall William Fishwick (1983).
Ronald Revisited: The World of Ronald McDonald. (Bowling Green,
OH: Bowling Green University Popular Press, 157 p.). McDonald's
Corporation; Fast food restaurants -- United States.
(McDonald's), John F. Love (1986).
McDonald's: Behind the Arches
(New York, NY: Bantam Books, 470 p.). Kroc, Ray, 1902- ; McDonald's
Corporation; Restaurateurs--United States--Biography; Fast food
restaurants--United States.
(McDonald's), Ray Kroc; with Robert Anderson (1987).
Grinding It
Out: The Making of McDonald's (New York, NY: St. Martin's Press, 218
p. [orig. pub. 1977]). Kroc, Ray, 1902- ; McDonald's Corporation;
Restaurateurs--United States--Biography.
(McDonald's), edited by James L. Watson (1997).
Golden Arches
East: McDonald's in East Asia (Stanford, CA: Stanford University
Press, 256 p.). McDonald's Corporation; Fast food restaurants--East
Asia.
(McDonald's), George Cohon; with David Macfarlane (1997).
To
Russia with Fries (Toronto, ON: M&S, 335 p.). Cohon, George, 1937- ; McDonald's Corporation; McDonald's Corporation;
Restaurateurs--Canada--Biography; Fast food restaurants--Russia
(Federation); Fast food restaurants--Canada; Restaurateurs
(Alimentation)--Canada--Biographies; Restaurants-minute--Russie;
Restaurants-minute--Canada.
(McDonald's), John Vidal (1997).
McLibel: Burger Culture on Trial.
(New York, NY: New Press, 354 p.). Reporter (London Guardian). Morris,
David, 1954- --Trials, litigation, etc.; Steel, Helen--Trials,
litigation, etc.; McDonald's Corporation--Trials, litigation, etc.;
Trials (Libel)--England--London.
(McDonald's), Joe L. Kincheloe (2002).
The Sign of the Burger:
McDonald's and the Culture of Power. (Philadelphia, PA: Temple
University Press, 232 p.). McDonald's Corporation; Fast food
restaurants--Social aspects; Restaurant management; Consumer behavior;
United States--Social conditions--1945-.
(Old French House Restaurant), Edward J. Lepoma (1998). A
Passion for People: The Story of Mary Mahoney and Her Old French House
Restaurant. (Brandon, MS: Quail Ridge Press, 154 p.). Mahoney,
Mary, 1924-1985; Old French House Restaurant;
Restaurateurs--Mississippi--Biloxi--Biography.
(Park Lane Restaurant), Ellen Taussig (1979).
Your Host, Peter Gust of the Park Lane Restaurant, His Story.
(Boston, MA: Herman Pub., 207 p.). Gust, Peter; Park Lane Restaurant
(Buffalo, N.Y.); Restaurateurs--New York (State)--Buffalo--Biography.
(Pepe's North of the Border), Lyn Kidder (1996).
Tacos on the Tundra: The Story of Barrow, Alaska's Long-Time Resident,
Fran Tate. (Anchorage, AK: Bonaparte Books, 266 p.). Tate,
Fran, 1929- ; Pepe's North of the Border (Restaurant);
Restaurateurs--Alaska--Barrow--Biography; Barrow (Alaska)--Description
and travel.
(Restaurant Associates), Lawrence Freundlich (2000).
A Time Well Spent: A Biography of Jerome Brody. (New York, NY:
Welcome Rain, 236 p.,). Brody, Jerome; Restaurant Associates;
restaurant management.
(Russian Tea Room), Faith Stewart-Gordon (1999).
The Russian Tea Room: A Love Story. (New York, NY: Scribner,
250 p.). Wife-Husband Owners of The Russian Tea Room. Stewart-Gordon,
Faith--Biography; Russian Tea Room.
(Saga Corporation), William F. Scandling (1994).
The Saga of Saga:
The Life and Death of an American Dream. (Mill Valley, CA: Vista
Linda Press, 382 p.). Scandling, William F.; Saga Corporation--History;
Universities and colleges--Food service--United States--History.
(Shenkel’s Restaurant), Edith Barr Dunn (1986).
Lady from Longboat
Key. (New York, NY: Carlton Press, 192 p.). Dunn, Edith Barr, 1920-
; Restaurateurs--United States--Biography; Restaurant management--United
States.
(Shoney's - founded 1947 by Alex Schoenbaum and Ray Danner), Steve Watkins (1997).
The Black O: Racism and
Redemption in an American Corporate Empire. (Athens, GA: University
of Georgia Press, 276 p.). Shoney's Inc.--Personnel management;
Discrimination in restaurants--United States--Case studies;
Discrimination in employment--United States--Case studies; Race
discrimination--United States--Case studies; African
Americans--Employment--Case studies.
(Sloppy Joe’s), Carol Shaughnessy (1995).
Sloppy Joe’s: The Tradition Continues. (Key West, FL: Market
Share Co., 58 p.). Hemingway, Ernest, 1899-1961 --Homes and
haunts--Florida--Key West; Sloppy Joe’s (Bar); Bars (Drinking
establishments)--Florida--Key West--History; Novelists, American--20th
century--Biography; Key West (Fla.)--Intellectual life--20th century;
Key West (Fla.)--Social life and customs.
(Starbucks), Howard Schultz and Dori Jones Yang (1997).
Pour Your
Heart into It: How Starbucks Built a Company One Cup at a Time. (New
York, NY: Hyperion, 351 p.). Starbucks Coffee Company; Coffee
industry--United States.
(Steak n Shake), Robert P. Cronin (2000).
Selling Steakburgers:
The Growth of a Corporate Culture. (Carmel, IN: Guild Press of
Indiana, 112 p.). Cronin, Robert P., 1924- ; Steak n Shake (Firm);
Restaurateurs--United States--Biography.
(Stork Club), Ralph Blumenthal (2000).
Stork Club: America's
Most Famous Nightspot and the Lost World of Cafe Society. (Boston,
MA: Little, Brown, 296 p.). Reporter (New York Times). Billingsley,
Sherman; Stork Club (New York, NY).
(Stuckey's), Elizabeth McCants Drinnon (1997).
Stuckey: The
Biography of Williamson Sylvester | |