In 1954 the
Bresler's Ice Cream Company decided to expand into the growing fast-food drive-in industry. Company executives were looking for a new outlet to promote higher sales of their malts and shakes without altering their existing ice cream shop franchises. Under the name Henry's Hamburgers, many franchises were eventually established. The name Henry was chosen to honor the memory of the late Henry Bresler, one of the brothers who had founded the ice cream company. Henry's was modelled after James Collin's Hamburger Handout restaurants in Southern California which in turn had been modelled after the
McDonald brother's San Bernardino operation. They were both a Chicago area competitor and copy of McDonald's.
Growth By 1956, Henry's Hamburgers had thirty-five locations in the
Chicago area. At the time that outnumbered some of the industry's current giants, such as
McDonald's. By the early 1960s there were over two hundred Henry's restaurants across America with operations headquarters in
Chicago. Henry's used the advertising slogans "Aren't you hungry for a Henry's?" and "Head for Henry's", and offered burgers for as low as 15 cents or "ten burgers for a buck".
Decline By the mid-1970s Henry's Hamburger locations began closing while repeated mergers and ownership changes took place within the Bresler company. The only remaining location is in
Benton Harbor, Michigan. ==See also==