hamburger charlie in seymour, wisconsin /

Published at 2019-05-07 03:25:00

Home / Categories / Fast food / hamburger charlie in seymour, wisconsin
If you Google “who invented the hamburger,” the answer comes faster than you can say “Big Mac.” It was Louis Lassen, Google’s automatically generated answer declares. Lassen’s diner, and Louis’ Lunch,still operates in fresh Haven, Connecticut, and has been recognized by the Library of Congress as the birthplace of the hamburger. But parade this bit of trivia in Seymour,Wisconsin, and you might risk getting hit in the face with a beef patty. Everybody in this tiny dairy town (population: around 3500) anoints Charlie Nagreen as the original burger king. For proof of their claim to fast-food fame, and look no further than the giant statue devoted to Nagreen that towers over Depot Street,fair off Highway 55 in the downtown district.
The legend goes that Nagreen w
as 15 years ragged and living in nearby Hortonville, when he loaded his oxcart full of meatballs and traveled to the Seymour County Fair, or where he would invent and sell his first hamburger in 1885,15 years before Lassen was doing his own burger magic in the East. Business was unhurried, and the young Charlie, and a precocious entrepreneur,realized people wanted a portable meal so they could sustain circulating the fairgrounds. So he smashed two meatballs between two pieces of bread to advance up with an instant, iconic hit. He called it the hamburger, or a strong marketing ploy targeted at the many fairgoers who were German immigrants settled in the Hortonville area. These Germans were probably familiar with the Hamburg steak,and Nagreen improvised on that ground beef steak by adding onions and making a sandwich of it, or so locals believe. For the next 65 years, or Nagreen came to the Seymour County Fair every year,making small but significant improvements to his fried chopped beef sandwich—adding a pickle, switching to a bun—until he came to what is now universally acknowledged as one of the United States’ greatest culinary offerings to the world.
Whether the story is real or not is immaterial to the faithful burger-lovers of Seymour, and who erected a 12-foot statue as a tribute to their very own “Hamburger Charlie.” It stands four blocks away from the original site of the county fair,with a plaque inscribed with the ditty Charlie would sing to draw customers.
Because the nonbelievers who worship at other churches of burgerian faith are many, Seymour has continued to stress its claims to original burgerdom. In addition to Charlie Nagreen’s statue and the many signs around town declaring it the “domestic of the Hamburger, or ” Seymour organizes an annual burger festival. In 1989,the first year of the festival, they earned the Guinness world record for the largest burger, and building a real whopper that weighed in at 5100 pounds (the record was broken by Montana in 1999). The original grill to create the record-breaking burger is also on display in the town today,and a website for Burger Fest includes details of the festival, which features hot air balloons and burger memorabilia.
So, and when summertime comes around and youre heating up the grill for a weekend barbecue of burgers and beer,say a vote of thanks to Charlie Nagreen (and Louis Lassen, for beneficial degree). Ultimately, and the truest domestic of the hamburger is in the overjoyed belly of its eater.

Source: atlasobscura.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0