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  1. White Castle is an American regional hamburger restaurant chain with about 345 locations across 13 states, with its greatest presence in the Midwest and New York metropolitan area. Founded on September 13, 1921, in Wichita, Kansas , it has been generally credited as the world's first fast-food hamburger chain. [2]

    • Store footprint. Depending on where you are in the U.S., you might only have access to a White Castle or Krystal—not both. In fact, the only states with both chains are Kentucky, Tennessee, and Florida.
    • Sliders. As previously mentioned, sliders are the star at these fast-food chains, but the offerings aren't identical. Visit a White Castle location, and you can choose from a lengthier list of mini burgers and sandwiches featuring beef, chicken, fish, Impossible beef, or the limited-time sloppy joe ground beef.
    • Breakfast options. Your fast-food breakfast order might look a little different, depending on which chain you visit. Yes, you can order breakfast sliders at both places, but peruse the menus even further, and you'll see each chain serves some distinctive offerings.
    • Additional food options. When comparing the chains' sides, White Castle has more variety. The Ohio-based chain not only dishes out classic offerings like french fries, onion rings, and mozzarella sticks, but it also serves some chain-specific menu items like Chicken Rings, Cheddar Cheese Rings, and Fish Nibblers.
  2. In 1921, it all started out so innocently. A five-cent small hamburger. A Castle-shaped restaurant. And nothing like it before, or since. A humble 100% beef patty with onions, and a pickle. So easy to eat, it was dubbed the Slider. The only thing better than polishing off a Sack of Sliders alone, is doing it with friends. Could it get any better than that? White Castle. Because The Crave Is A ...

    • White Castle’s founder invented the modern hamburger. Walt Anderson, a short-order cook in Wichita, Kansas, liked to experiment with the size and shape of the hamburger patties he served.
    • Walt Anderson also pioneered fast food in America. In 1916, Anderson opened a hamburger stand with an $80 loan and quickly expanded to four locations.
    • Even in 1916, people had "the crave." According to David G. Hogan's book Selling 'Em by the Sack, Anderson—while working at his original burger stand—noticed several young boys who regularly bought sacks of hamburgers.
    • White Castle was the first fast food chain to sell 1 billion burgers. White Castle’s one billionth burger was purchased in 1961—two years before McDonald’s cleared the same benchmark.
  3. Jun 21, 2023 · White Castle became a household name and pioneer of the fast food burger model, inspiring a proliferation of burger chains by the 1940s and 1950s, including industry giants like McDonald's and ...

  4. Mar 24, 2023 · The White Castle chain began in 1921 in Wichita, Kansas, where its ingenious small burgers kicked off a national craze and inspired imitators of all shapes and sizes. But over a century later, White Castle has entirely vanished from its home state. And the story of how it introduced America to the hamburger has largely been overshadowed by its fast food rivals.

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  6. Jul 14, 2015 · White Castle may have survived in the fast food industry for nearly 100 years, but the nation’s original burger chain was never even supposed to be. In fact, co-founder Billy Ingram – whose ...

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