The Founder of Wendy’s Helped Save
KFC and was a High School Dropout
Dave Thomas the founder of
Wendy’s, before starting the Wendy’s franchise helped save the KFC franchise
and was a high school dropout.
Thomas
first worked at a Knoxville restaurant at the young age of 12 years old, from
which he was eventually fired due to a misunderstanding with his boss about a
vacation.  At 15, he worked at a Hobby House Restaurant in Ft.
Wayne.  His father and step-family, at that time, were moving, but he
decided to drop out of high school and stay in Ft. Wayne.  He then moved into
the YMCA and started working full time at the Hobby House.  This worked
out for him as, through his job at the Hobby House Restaurant, he met none
other than Colonel Sanders himself, the founder of Kentucky Fried Chicken, who
later became his mentor.
Many
years later, after a stint in the Korean war as a cook in the army for which he
volunteered, in 1962, Thomas invested in and was placed in a managerial
position over four of Colonel Sanders’ KFC’s that were failing.   He
saw that one of the problems with KFC, and all fast food restaurants of the
day, was that they had much too complicated menu’s.  He then worked with
Colonel Sanders to drastically simplify the menus, focusing on a few signature
meals. This small change particularly helped turn around the KFC franchise;
and, though it was a minor thing, helped revolutionize fast food restaurant
menus all over the world.  Even to this day, the staple of most fast food
restaurants is their overly simplistic menus, focusing on a handful of
signature meals.  After he had turned these failing KFC restaurants
around, he then sold his stake in them back to Colonel Sanders for a
significant profit over what he originally paid, receiving $1.5 million in the
sale.
He
then took this money and invested it by opening the first “Wendy’s Old
Fashioned Hamburgers” on November 15, 1969;  the restaurant being named
after his fourth child, Melinda Lou Thomas.  You might be asking yourself,
“How do you get ‘Wendy’ out of Melinda Lou Thomas?”  This was a nickname
given to her as she couldn’t pronounce her own name when she was young, instead
she would say “Wenda”, which is how she got the nickname Wendy and how the
restaurant got its name.  6000 restaurants later, Wendy’s is now the third
largest “hamburger” fast food restaurant in the world with annual revenue of
about 7 billion dollars, lagging behind Burger King (12,000 restaurants), and
McDonald’s (31,000 restaurants).
Other
interesting Dave Thomas Facts:
- As a child, his favorite restaurant was Kewpee Hamburgers, the second ever chain of hamburger fast-food restaurants. Their staple items were square hamburgers and thick malt milkshakes, much like Wendy’s.
 - Thomas also is the one who introduced the KFC trademark sign featuring a revolving red-striped bucket of chicken.
 - He was the first to successfully implement a drive through pickup in a restaurant, which is of course, now used by all fast food restaurants.
 - Wendy’s was also the first to successfully create a “fast food” style restaurant that didn’t pre-cook its food nor used pre-made frozen items. He credits his ability to do this with knowledge gained in cooking for over 2000 soldiers daily while in the army.
 - Thomas never met or knew who his biological parents were, other than that they were of Greek descent and that his biological mother was single and dirt poor do the Great Depression.
 - Thomas was a Freemason, member of the Shriners, and an honorary Kentucky Colonel.
 - Realizing that his success as a high school dropout might convince other teenagers to quit school (something he later admitted was one of his life’s greatest mistakes), he became a student at Coconut Creek High School and in 1993 received his G.E.D. being voted by his classmates as “most likely to succeed”.
 - He appeared in over 800 Wendy’s commercials; a record for “Longest Running Television Advertising Campaign Starring a Company Founder”; according to the Guinness Book of World Records
 - Being adopted himself, he founded the Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption to help children find homes and help them and their new families afterward.
 - In 1979, Thomas’ rags-to-riches story earned him the Horatio Alger Award from the Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished Americans.
 - On the death of “Colonel” Harland Sanders, Kentucky Fried Chicken’s founder and a mentor of his, Dave Thomas ordered that all flags at Wendy’s franchises be flown at half-staff.
 - Thomas died January 8th, 2002 after a decade long battle with liver cancer.
 
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