George
William “Bill” Church Jr., who guided the growth of Church's
Fried Chicken beyond San Antonio, Texas and transformed it into one
of the largest chicken fast-food chains, died Feb. 7, 2014 at age 81
in Austin, Texas from a lingering illness after breaking his hip the
previous year.
His father, George W. Church Sr., opened his first restaurant near
the Alamo on April 17, 1952, called Church's Fried Chicken-To-Go. The
elder Church died in 1956.
Family members took over company operations and in 1962, when the
chain ran eight San Antonio restaurants, son Bill Church Jr. took
over as the top executive, eventually building into a national
Fortune 500 company.
Bill Church Jr. was called an inventor, a motivator and an innovator
who developed the cooking equipment and the stainless-steel shop he
operated.
The first Church's restaurants usually had 15 to 20 people lined up
at each window for take-out chicken orders that sold for 49 cents for
two pieces and a roll. In 1965, Church and older brother Richard
developed a marinade that could be made at each store instead of a
central location, allowing the company to expand and begin
franchising the chain. That same year, J. David Bamberger, a former
vacuum cleaner salesman, joined the company to oversee the
franchising effort.
By 1967, Church's restaurants were in five other Texas cities, and in
1968 operated 17 restaurants. The expansion philosophy was to place
Church's restaurants in poor urban neighborhoods where Kentucky Fried
Chicken did not operate. Church's Fried Chicken was incorporated in
1969 and became a public company. By the end of that year, it had
more than 100 restaurants in seven states.
Strong growth in the 1970s made Church's the second-largest
fried-chicken fast food chain behind Kentucky Fried Chicken.
Financial World magazine ranked Church's Fried Chicken as the
nation's No. 1 growth company for several years in a row. The company
began international operations in 1979.
In 1980, Bill Church Jr. resigned as corporation chairman, replaced
by Roger Harvin, who had been a childhood friend of Church.
In 1989, Church's Chicken was acquired by Al Copeland, founder of
Popeye's Famous Fried Chicken. However, Copeland Enterprises declared
bankruptcy in 1991, and creditors formed America's Favorite Chicken
Co. Inc. to be the parent company of the Church's Chicken and Popeyes
chains.
AFC sold Church's Chicken to Arcapita, an Islamic venture capital
firm, in 2004. A San Francisco private equity firm, Friedman
Fleischer & Lowe, purchased Church's Chicken from Arcapita about
five years later.
After leaving the company, Bill Church Jr., who enjoyed the study of
physics, invested in alternative energy research and pursued his
hobbies. He was an accomplished and passionate golfer and a rated
Class A (Elo 1800-1999) chessplayer.
He was a founding member of Troon Golf and Country Club in
Scottsdale, Arizona. Although Church had spent much of his time
since 1980 in Phoenix, Ariz., he had other residences, including one
in Austin, where he lived for about a decade before his death. He
moved to Austin in order to be close to his family and according to
his grandson, taught him to play chess.
In 1972 Church sponsored an international tournament in San Antonio
that included, European and Soviet grandmasters pitted against
grandmasters and masters from the Americas.
While Fischer did not play in the tournament, he did visit it along
with Anatoly Karpov
and Tigran
Petrosian. Also present was an Expert (Elo 2000-2199)
named William Scott, a
well-known Atlanta, Georgia publisher and important
figure in Atlanta chess who was visititing the tournament.
There was a crowd of people surrounding Fischer asking for his
autograph and Scott handed Fischer a program and asked him to sign
it. As Fischer was signing, Scott told Fischer that they had both
played in the U.S. Open in 1956 where Scott had finished ahead of
him. Fischer handed the signed program back then got snarky and
said, “Oh yeah. Well what’s your rating now?” Scott mumbled
something about being only an expert and Fischer replied, “Um huh,”
turned to walk away.
San
Antonio, Texas 19 November - 5 December 1972
1-3)
Portisch 10.5
1-3)
Petrosian 10.5
1-3)
Karpov 10.5
4)
Gligoric 10.0
5)
Keres 9.5
6-7)
Hort 9.0
6-7)
Suttles 9.0
8-9)
Mecking 8.5
8-9)
Larsen 8.5
10)
Byrne 7.0
11-12)
Evans 6.5
11-12)
Browne 6.5
13)
Kaplan 5.0
14-15)
Campos Lopez 3.5
14-15)
Saidy 3.5
16)
Smith 2.0
Out
of all the great games played in this tournament this game, Kenneth
Smith against Larry Evans, features Smith playing his very own
Smith-Mora Gambit. The game also shows why openings like this
should not be played against Grandmasters. Evans easily takes
control of the game and it's interesting to watch how effortlessly he
does it. Watch how his pieces, one at a time, spend a couple of
moves setting up conditions for the invasion of the next piece.