Food, Candy, Drinks

15-cent McDonalds burgers
15-cent McDonalds burgers 15-cent McDonalds burgers
and the real golden arches

Registered users can log in to post comments or submit items for the galleries.

Login Register

There are 19 comments for this item.

Posted by Vinnie Bagadonutz at 8:05 pm (PDT) on Mon June 15, 2020   
I remember getting 2 cheeseburgers,fries,and a drink and getting change back from a dollar. Where did it all go to?
Posted by Chuck Kopsho at 1:49 pm (PDT) on Thu March 30, 2017   
Gawd, I'm old enough to remember the old-school Mickey-Dees when all they had was walk-up windows. Back the 60s, IIRC, the food was excellently well made. But now they've gone downhill ever since. Ah! Those were the days when Mc-Dees made quality food for a pittance.
Posted by freddo30 at 2:30 pm (PDT) on Wed March 23, 2016   
And whatever happened to "fresh, never frozen"
Posted by freddo30 at 2:29 pm (PDT) on Wed March 23, 2016   
Henry, the fries started out at 12 cents ... I remember waiting for the neighbor lady to return from lunch at the first McDonald's in Akron - her comment was "that was the worst lunch I ever had"
Posted by IOfferMyBentNickel at 5:20 am (PST) on Tue January 19, 2016   
I enjoy reading the great posts about McDonald's: mine relates to the spring/summer of 1977. My dad and I visiting McD's and he asking me if I wanted not one "Big Mac" but, would I like TWO (?): I was a typical 14 year old. If memory serves each burger was "75 cents." I learned over the years this location was the very first McDonald's every built in my city, and it is still there today. I can't recall the last time I walked into their restaurant.
Posted by Scott Race at 9:32 am (PDT) on Tue May 12, 2015   
I rode in my first VW Beetle and ate my first Mickey-D burger on the same day in 1961, what a day!
Posted by sunny1948 at 10:42 pm (PDT) on Mon October 13, 2014   
The Azusa. Ca MDs was across the street from the drive-in. One night a week they had 10 for a dollar. what a deal. we'd load up and head over to watch the movie.
Posted by Kathy Townsend at 10:01 pm (PDT) on Fri August 1, 2014   
I came from a very small rural town in Southeastern Colorado. McDonald's never even came to our region until around 1970. Unfortunately, I lived 40 miles from it, so never ate there except once every two months. To this day, we still don't have McDonald's in my town which has gotten even smaller than back in the day.
Posted by Steverino at 9:51 pm (PDT) on Mon July 7, 2014   
When we moved into our house in North Hollywood, CA. in 1961, around the corner on Victory Blvd., was a 'Peak's Hambugers'. The sign was the same as McD's, in fact, at the bottom of the sign it said 'owned and operated by the E. F. McDonald Corp.'
Posted by LoyalTubist at 2:43 pm (PDT) on Mon March 31, 2014   
I have nothing against McDonald's now. The meat is still the same meat it always was (check with your local health inspector if you don't believe me), but it is frozen. Back when it was ground in the store (Wendy's still does this) there were some problems with foreign matter getting into the meat. It was a simpler time when these pictures were taken and the problems were often overlooked. We looked at McDonald's as a treat rather than a daily habit.
Posted by Dan Houchins at 9:51 am (PST) on Sun February 23, 2014   
That's when McDonald's food was actually delicious....
Posted by unclekipsy at 8:31 am (PST) on Wed December 4, 2013   
We rode our bicycles 3 miles to play handball and then pedaled another 3 miles to McDonald's on Merrick Blvd. (Laurelton,Queens). We would get 2 burgers, fries and a thick shake and sit on the tiled bench seat outside (no seats indoors). It was the late 1960's and the total was about $1.08 if I remember. Then it was 6 miles home on my stingray bike. Those days were great !
Posted by packratjohn at 5:54 pm (PST) on Sun November 17, 2013   
I'm deleting my old comments as we go. If you'd like you can email direct to john@homeisp.com. Small world. My youngest was born in SB, and after college moved to Indy. Still owns a home there, but now lives in Wyoming. We went to the zoo in SB quite often, but we lived just off Portage and Elwood. My wife's office was on Ironwood, and mine too after a while. I recall the MacD's just across from Memorial Hospital.
Posted by HenryM at 8:12 am (PST) on Sat February 16, 2013   
An early radio commercial touted McDonalds' 15-cent hamburgers, 15-cent fries, and 15-cent drinks. It went, in part: "Forty-five cents for a three course meal? / Sounds to me like that's a steal! / That's all it costs to eat here, every day / Drive out to McDonald's Drive-In right away."
Posted by whitesnake127 at 2:46 pm (PST) on Sun November 4, 2012   
Being in the Navy at the time (making little money), it was a way to take a date out and have a good time.
Posted by Mikeaz1946 at 11:57 am (PDT) on Mon October 29, 2012   
We all went to McD's in the Bay Area, Calif in the early 60's. At that time they were the best tasting for practically nothing.
Posted by dtdavis2012 at 7:54 pm (PST) on Tue January 31, 2012   
As a kid we had a McDonalds in Virginia Beach, VA in the early 60's--why did everything taste so much better then?
Posted by packratjohn at 1:49 pm (PST) on Mon November 7, 2011   
Had one in Jacksonville, FL, in the 60's. Walkup only, no drive through, no dining room. Some outdoor tables, but that was all. Even then they had the best fries around. Then moved to N. Indiana, and got to see the original McDonald's in Des Plaines, IL.
Posted by Bob Wilson Jr at 10:53 am (PST) on Sun December 19, 2010   
I remember an early McDonald's just like this one which came to Newark, Delaware, in the late 1950's.

Registered users can log in to post comments or submit items for the galleries.

Login Register