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The Kentucky Fried Chicken® was founded by Colonel Harland Sanders (born on September 9, 1890)
at the age of sixty-five. KFC® is currently one of the largest businesses of the global food service
industry and is widely known around the world as the face of Colonel Sanders.
Every year, over a billion KFC® chicken dinners are served featuring the Colonel’s “finger lickin’ good”
special recipe. The Colonel has spread his industry currently to more than eighty countries and
territories globally.
At the age of forty, Colonel Sanders began cooking for travelers in his service station located in
Corbin, KY. However, rather than coming in for service for their cars, hundreds of people began
coming to the Colonel’s station specifically for his food. So he expanded his new up-and-coming
business by moving across the street to a hotel and restaurant that seated one hundred and forty-
two people. While cooking here, Colonel Sanders perfected his secret blend of eleven herbs and
spices for his special recipe that is still used today.
With his special cooking techniques, Sanders’ station became famous and he was recognized for his
amazing cuisine by the Governor at the time, Ruby Laffoon in 1935 when he was made a Kentucky
Colonel; hence the name Colonel Sanders. In 1939, Colonel Sanders’ restaurant won the top spot on
Duncan Hines’ “Adventures in Good Eating.”
After his amazing start-up in 1952, the Colonel devoted himself for the rest of his life to his chicken
franchising business. To spread his famous recipe, he spanned the country in his car from his small
business in Kentucky to cook his chicken for restaurant owners and their employees. If his subjects
loved it like his other customers had, the Colonel made a deal with the establishment, saying that
they would pay him a nickel for each chicken they sold in their restaurant. So many restaurants
agreed that by 1964, the Colonel had over six hundred franchised outlets in the United States and
Canada for his chicken. Also in 1964, Colonel Sanders decided to sell his interest in the United
States company for small change (only $2 million) to a small faction of investors, such as John Y.
Brown Jr., the governor of Kentucky from 1980 to 1984. However, Colonel Sanders continued to be
the public spokesman for KFC® and in 1976, he was named the world’s second-most identifiable
celebrity by an independent survey.
With this new group of investors undertaking the Corporation, KFC® expanded and matured quickly.
The Corporation was listed on the New York Stock Exchange on January 16, 1969, only three years
after it had gone public on March 17, 1966. Then, after the KFC Corporation® was acquired by
Heublein Inc. on July 8, 1971 for $285 million, the company grew to an enormous three thousand and