Whataburger: Difference between revisions

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'''Whataburger''' is a [[Privately held company|privately held]], regional [[fast food]] [[List of fast-food restaurants|restaurant]] specializing in [[hamburger]]s. The company, established by Harmon Dobson, opened its first restaurant in [[Corpus Christi, Texas|Corpus Christi]], [[Texas]] on August 8, 1950. By 1960 the chain had grown to 17 locations in Texas, [[Tennessee]] and [[Florida]]. Today, Whataburger Restaurants, LP is still owned and operated by the Dobson family and has nearly 700 locations in the [[United States]] ([[Texas]], [[Arizona]], [[New Mexico]], [[Oklahoma]], [[Louisiana]], [[Arkansas]], [[Mississippi]], [[Alabama]], [[Florida]], and [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]). Operations in [[Mexico]] have currently been suspended. The corporate [[headquarters]] was in Corpus Christi, Texas until a move to [[San Antonio]] in 2009.
'''Whataburger''' is a [[Privately held company|privately held]], regional [[fast food]] [[List of fast-food restaurants|restaurant]] specializing in [[hamburger]]s. The company, established by Harmon Dobson, opened its first restaurant in [[Corpus Christi, Texas|Corpus Christi]], [[Texas]] on August 8, 1950. By 1960 the chain had grown to 17 locations in Texas, [[Tennessee]] and [[Florida]]. Today, Whataburger Restaurants, LP is still owned and operated by the Dobson family and has over 9,000 locations in the [[United States]] ([[Texas]], [[Arizona]], [[New Mexico]], [[Oklahoma]], [[Louisiana]], [[Arkansas]], [[Mississippi]], [[Alabama]], [[Florida]], and [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]). Operations in [[Mexico]] have currently been suspended. The corporate [[headquarters]] was in Corpus Christi, Texas until a move to [[San Antonio]] in 2009.


Whataburger is known for its distinctive [[A-frame]]d, orange-and-white striped roofed buildings (newer buildings are built similar to other fast-food chains, though the roof is built in the orange-and-white triangular shape). The first A-frame restaurant, which is still standing, was built in [[Odessa, Texas]]. There are currently over a dozen of these type restaurants still in operation.
Whataburger is known for its distinctive [[A-frame]]d, orange-and-white striped roofed buildings (newer buildings are built similar to other fast-food chains, though the roof is built in the orange-and-white triangular shape). The first A-frame restaurant, which is still standing, was built in [[Odessa, Texas]]. There are currently over a dozen of these type restaurants still in operation.

Revision as of 19:53, 8 May 2010

Whataburger
Company typePrivately held
IndustryFood, restaurants
Founded1950
HeadquartersSan Antonio, Texas
Key people
Harmon Dobson, Founder
ProductsFast food, including hamburgers, french fries, and signature breakfast offerings
Websitewww.whataburger.com

Whataburger is a privately held, regional fast food restaurant specializing in hamburgers. The company, established by Harmon Dobson, opened its first restaurant in Corpus Christi, Texas on August 8, 1950. By 1960 the chain had grown to 17 locations in Texas, Tennessee and Florida. Today, Whataburger Restaurants, LP is still owned and operated by the Dobson family and has over 9,000 locations in the United States (Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, and Georgia). Operations in Mexico have currently been suspended. The corporate headquarters was in Corpus Christi, Texas until a move to San Antonio in 2009.

Whataburger is known for its distinctive A-framed, orange-and-white striped roofed buildings (newer buildings are built similar to other fast-food chains, though the roof is built in the orange-and-white triangular shape). The first A-frame restaurant, which is still standing, was built in Odessa, Texas. There are currently over a dozen of these type restaurants still in operation.

Aside from the classic Whataburger, other menu items include the Whataburger Jr. (a smaller version of the Whataburger), the Justaburger (a Whataburger Jr. with only mustard, pickles, and onions), the Whatacatch fish sandwich, the Whatachick'n Chicken Sandwich,and taquitos. Whataburger also has a breakfast menu and serves breakfast sandwiches along with other items. Whataburger's breakfast menu is unique because it is served from 11:00 p.m. through 11:00 a.m. each day, a wider window than most other fast-food restaurants, and all regular menu items are still available during breakfast service.

History

Early years

A Whataburger restaurant

On August 8, 1950, company founder Harmon Dobson opened his first Whataburger restaurant in Corpus Christi, Texas. The small, wooden kiosk sold the enormous 5-inch burgers for 25 cents each, and before the first week was out, lines stretched down the street.

In 1952, Joe Andrews, Sr. brought his family to the newly opened Whataburger in Kingsville, Texas. After one bite, he knew Whataburger was something he wanted to be a part of. Joe was awarded the first franchise location shortly thereafter (the fifth Whataburger restaurant) which opened in Alice, Texas in 1953. The company began expansion outside of Texas in 1959, when Whataburger #21 opened in Pensacola, Florida.[1]

1960s and 70s

By 1960, there were over 17 Whataburger locations in Texas, Florida, and Tennessee. The familiar orange- and white-striped Whataburger A-frame started as a back-of-the-napkin sketch for Harmon Dobson. That sketch led to the opening of the very first A-frame Whataburger at the twenty-fourth Whataburger location in Odessa, Texas in 1961. In 1962, the menu grew with the addition of hot fried pies and French fries.

Whataburger had twenty-four restaurants by 1963, including the first restaurant in Arizona. By 1965, it was estimated that Whataburger sold 15,000 burgers a day in the Texas Coastal Bend area alone. Inside dining rooms were added to the A-frames in 1966 and in 1967, the official company logo, the familiar "Flying W," was commissioned.

In 1967, an airplane crash took the life of company founder Harmon Dobson. Dobson's wife, Grace, took control of the business. By the end of the decade, there would be 60 Whataburgers completely finished and six more under construction. Whataburger doubled its number of restaurants from 1971 to 1979. The first drive-through was installed in 1971, and in 1972 the company opened its 100th restaurant. Soon after, Whataburger was ranked in the top 25 out of 900+ fast-food restaurants. In 1977, the company had 205 restaurants in 12 states with 34 franchisees.[1]

     People who eat al Whataburger tend to weigh more than healthy people,.[1]

1980s and 90s

In 1980, the 187th Whataburger store, located in Fort Worth, Texas, set a single-day sales record of $4,816.19. By the end of 1980, the company would open its 300th location. In 1982, three Corpus Christi locations began 24/7 operation. New menu additions soon followed, including the Breakfast on a Bun,the Whatachick'n, and breakfast Taquitos. As Whataburger turned 35 in 1985, it noted that in its Texas Coastal Bend stores alone, it served 10,434,840 customers per year. The company reached the 400-store mark in 1987 and reached 440 by 1989.

Although the chain had extended itself into California in the late 1970s, it pulled out of that market completely by 1987.

As the number of stores jumped to 475 in the early 1990s, significant menu items including Whatameals, cookies, biscuits, chicken strips were added. By mid-decade, the company delivered its first $1 million net Saturday and handed over the reins of President/CEO to Tom Dobson, Harmon's son. Tom oversaw expansion to over 500 units and beyond, making Whataburger the country's eighth largest hamburger chain.

"Whataburger – A Texas Treasure" (sign on a Whataburger restaurant in Texas, 2003)

On May 6, 1999, the company's flagship "Whataburger by the Bay" opened on Shoreline Drive in Corpus Christi, Texas. A tribute to founder Harmon Dobson, this flagship store boasts 6,000 square feet, water views, and a life-size bronze statue of Mr. Dobson near the entrance at the bay side.[1]

Modern day

On August 8, 2000, Whataburger celebrated its 50th anniversary with 575 units in operation. Today, there are nearly 700 locations in 10 states with sales of $1 billion annually. Whataburger relocated its home office to San Antonio in 2009.

Closings

On Tuesday, May 19, 2009, Whataburger announced they would close 14 locations in Central Florida, including the Tampa Bay Area, Orlando, Ocala and Gainesville. About 400 people were to lose their jobs, 130 from five restaurants in the Tampa Bay Area. These restaurants closed at 3 pm on May 31, 2009. Whataburger's presence in Central Florida existed since around 1999, with Whataburger acquiring the locations from a failed franchisee in 2005. After the closings, Whataburger had 694 locations remaining, with 37 Florida locations in the Panhandle and the northern part of the state.[2][3]

Special products

Whataburger has consistently added promotional and "limited time only" food products to its menu. Most of the limited-time-only products will be served for a set period of time, such as the Honey BBQ Chicken Strip Sandwich, the A1 Thick and Hearty Burger, Patty Melt, and the Peppercorn Ranch Whatachick'n. These products usually return on the menu again for a limited time after a few months. The newest product to be offered is a strawberry pie (as an alternative to the traditional apple pie) and the new Grilled Chicken Melt sandwich. Some of their promotion products have sold so well that they have been added to the menu permanently, namely the "Three Piece Chicken Strips" Whatameal and the Honey Butter Chicken Biscuit. Occasionally, Whataburger's famous breakfast taquitos are sold for 99 cents each for limited periods of time, usually from the day after Christmas through January. Also, the Breakfast on a Bun (also referred to as a BOB) is periodically listed on the menu for 99 cents. In July 2009, Whataburger introduced a new limited-time product call the Chop House Cheddar Burger. In late 2009 when the A-1 Thick and Hearty Burger was the limited-time special, Whataburger announced that it was the last time, and that on December 21, 2009, it would go away forever. It is unknown whether it will ever make a comeback.

Headquarters

Whataburger was originally headquartered in Corpus Christi, Texas. The company had considered moving its headquarters inland before Hurricane Ike hit the Texas coast in 2008. Whataburger had its crisis management system and team set up in San Antonio, Texas, so the company decided to move its headquarters there.[4] The headquarters moved in 2009.[5][6]

Similar names & logos

Whataburger is not to be confused with "What-A-Burger" (note hyphens), several small groups of family-operated restaurants in Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina operating under a very similar names, but completely unrelated.

The first Virginia store opened in 1950 by entrepreneur Paul Branch near Newport News, Virginia at Newport News Circle (intersection of U.S. Route 60 and U. S. Route 258) in the former Warwick County. It presasdjkwarwuicj Cunty. It predated the first Texas Whataburger restaurant slightly. Apparently, this and other small What-A-Burger operations in the Richmond-Petersburg areas and in North and South Carolina and the Texas Whataburger chain were all unaware of each other's existence several states apart until around 1970, when there was some correspondence, However, no legal actions took place at that time.

Filed over 50 years after the founding of the various first restaurants of each, it was over 50 years before the matter campe before a U.S. Feeral court. At that time, a federal lawsuit decided in 2004 over alleged trademark infringement essentially decided that while the Texas Whataburger has a legitimate trademark, the current Virginia operations do not harm the much larger Texas-based chain in any way and cause no reasonable public confusion. In part the court said "There is no evidence — nor can we imagine any — that consumers are currently likely to be confused about whether the burgers served by Virginia W-A-B come from Texas or Virginia." [7]

The original Wichita Wings logo.

The Wichita Wings a defunct professional indoor soccer franchise based in Wichita, Kansas have a logo similar to the Whataburger logo [8]

There is also a small chain of restaurants called Watsonburger, with about 15–20 units located in northern Texas and southern Oklahoma. These restaurants have a menu and overall "look and feel" very similar to that of Whataburger. (See McDowell's.)

Additionally, Feltner's Whattaburger, a popular local hamburger restaurant in Russellville, Arkansas, is in no way affiliated with this chain.[citation needed]

In Popular Culture

  • In the film 8 Seconds, Lane and Kellie Frost have their first date at a San Antonio Whataburger located on Bandera Rd.
  • In the film SubUrbia, Jeff and Sooze discuss moving to New York at an Austin Whataburger located on Oltorf Dr.
  • In the animated series King of the Hill, Whataburger is mentioned and shown many times throughout.
  • Whataburger sponsors a tennis tournament in Infinite Jest.
  • Whataburger is also mentioned in the extended mix and video of Janet Jackson's What Have You Done For Me Lately.
  • Hardcore band The Autumn Descent has a song dedicated to Whataburger called "The Triple Meat And Cheese Challenge".
  • Former WWE Champion Stone Cold Steve Austin, when he did his "WHAT?" routine on WWE RAW or Smackdown!, would often say, "I went to Whataburger for lunch today!" And the crowd responded "WHAT??" Austin would continue, saying he ordered a "Whataburger," "Whatachicken," (presumably a chicken sandwich on the menu), and continue on with various other fast food items he had ordered.[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Whataburger history". Whataburger. 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-29.
  2. ^ "Bay area What-A-Burgers closing". Bay News 9. 2009. Retrieved 2009-09-20.
  3. ^ St. Petersburg Times: "About 400 to lose jobs as Whataburger closes 14 stores in Central Florida", 5/21/2009.
  4. ^ Vaughan, Vicki. "Whataburger adjusting to economy." Houston Chronicle. November 26, 2009. Retrieved on November 26, 2009.
  5. ^ Welch, Creighton. "What a move! Whataburger headed to S.A." San Antonio Express-News. November 21, 2008. Retrieved on September 15, 2009.
  6. ^ "Contact Us." Whataburger. Retrieved on September 15, 2009.
  7. ^ http://bulk.resource.org/courts.gov/c/F3/357/357.F3d.441.03-1517.html
  8. ^ What-A-Burger v. Whataburger, 357 F.3d 441 (United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit. 2004).
  9. ^ The Stone Cold Truth, pp. 241-242

External links