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Texas Roadhouse was founded on February 17, 1993, at the Green Tree Mall in Clarksville, Indiana, across the Ohio River from Louisville, Kentucky. [8] Founder W. Kent Taylor , a Louisville native, lived in Colorado and worked at nightclubs and restaurants there.
HOW IT ALL STARTED. Kent Taylor opened the first Texas Roadhouse in Clarksville, Indiana, in 1993. THE VISION. Today's made-from-scratch food (at a great value) and legendary service began with a dream sketched on a cocktail napkin. ROADIES HELPING ROADIES.
Texas Roadhouse is known for steaks and buttered rolls reaching cult status. Find out what's going on behind the scenes at Texas Roadhouse.
Texas Roadhouse, which went public in 2004, opened seven company restaurants in the fourth quarter and two international franchise units. For the year, the brand debuted 27 company stores, four Bubba’s 33s, and five franchised restaurants, including four international.
In 1993, the first Texas Roadhouse popped up in Clarksville, Indiana. As Beyonce might say, "This ain't Texas." Entrepreneur Kent Taylor made a strategic branding move when he...
It is in the restaurant's name, after all. But the chain actually got its start hundreds of miles away in Indiana. In 1993, founder Kent Taylor opened the doors of the first Texas Roadhouse in Clarksville, Indiana, a city located on the Ohio River just across from Louisville, Kentucky.
Origins. Kent Taylor's first passion was the state of Colorado, not Texas, specifically the mountains in Colorado. The Texas Roadhouse founder, a self-described skiing addict, moved to Colorado after earning an undergraduate degree at the University of North Carolina.
In this video, we're going to take a look at why Texas Roadhouse is one of the most successful restaurant chains in the world. We'll explore their unique approach to food, their loyal customer...
The first Texas Roadhouse isn't actually Texan. Here's where the first ever Texas Roadhouse can be found, and a few other facts about eating there.
The news floored the restaurant world and left a prodigious hole at Texas Roadhouse, a chain that couldn’t be more like its founder if it tried. Few brands and founders, perhaps only KFC and Colonel Sanders, are more closely tied than Texas Roadhouse and Kent Taylor.