Photos Show What It Was Like To Eat At Mcdonald's In The 1970s

Product shot of a McDonald's Big Mac hamburger in 1977.
Henry Groskinsky/The LIFE Images Collection/Getty Images
- The first McDonald's franchise opened in Des Plaines, Illinois, on April 15, 1955.
- By the 1970s, McDonald's had grown into an increasingly popular fast-food establishment.
- The Quarter Pounder, Quarter Pounder with cheese, and Egg McMuffin were also added to the menu.
National Burger Day is May 28, and no fast-food chain knows burgers quite like McDonald's.
In the 1970s, less than a decade into its operation under businessman Ray Kroc, McDonald's was already a thriving company that had served millions of customers.
Richard and Maurice "Mac" McDonald opened the first McDonald's in 1940 as a barbecue restaurant, and Kroc opened its first franchise location in Des Plaines, Illinois, on April 15, 1955. That year, he also founded McDonald's System, Inc., which would become the McDonald's Corporation we know today.
By 1958, McDonald's had sold 100 million burgers, and the restaurants had adopted a signature design style prominently featuring the chain's iconic "golden arches." In 1961, Kroc bought the McDonald brothers out, and by the 1970s, the company was going from strength to strength.
Today, there are around 34,000 McDonald's locations around the world, but there are also new challenges. Consumers are being more cautious about their spending, so the brand's focus this year is on offering affordable meal options amid surging global food prices, its execs said in May.
Here's what it was like to eat at McDonald's in the 1970s.
Stephanie Maze/San Francisco Chronicle/Getty Images
By the 1970s, the company was well-established and beginning its global expansion. In 1967, the first McDonald's restaurant outside the US opened in Richmond, British Columbia, according to McDonald's website. By 1970, the chain had sold over 6 billion burgers.
Thomas J O'Halloran/US News & World Report Collection/PhotoQuest/Getty Images
McDonald's meals were served on plastic trays, which customers could then bring over to a dining-room table to enjoy.
Denver Post/Getty Images
While chains like In-N-Out Burger already had drive-thru windows, McDonald's didn't have one until 1975, when a franchisee in Sierra Vista, Arizona, skirted around an Army regulation that prevented military members from entering local businesses in fatigues.
According to Fast Company, he got around the regulation by knocking down a wall in his restaurant's kitchen and installing a drive-thru window in order to serve them.
Barbara Alper/Getty Images
Before the 1960s, the McDonald's menu was simple. It included burgers, cheeseburgers, fries, milkshakes, and other fast-food classics. The first new item to be added to the national menu was the Filet-O-Fish sandwich in 1965, followed by the iconic Big Mac in 1968.
Pearce/Fairfax Media/Getty Images
In 1973, the chain added two more signature burgers to its menu: the Quarter Pounder and Quarter Pounder with cheese.
In 1979, Happy Meals were introduced to attract parents who wanted to feed all family members at a great price.
Stephanie Maze/San Francisco Chronicle/Getty Images
The introduction of the Egg McMuffin marked a turning point for the brand, attracting a wide customer base at a new time of day.
Stephanie Maze/San Francisco Chronicle/Getty Images
In this photo, a family plays cards at a McDonald's in Mill Valley, California, in 1973.
George Lipman/Fairfax Media/Getty Images
Ronald McDonald was introduced in 1963 during a Washington, DC-marketed advertisement for the restaurant. In the ad, Ronald McDonald pulled hamburgers out of his belt and had a McDonald's cup for a nose. His hat was a tray with a Styrofoam hamburger, fries, and a milkshake on top of it.
McDonald's considered changing Ronald McDonald's character to a cowboy or spaceman, but those ideas were quickly discarded.
Stephanie Maze/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images
Fast Company reported that the first McDonald's PlayPlace was introduced in 1971, forever changing the McDonald's dining experience for families and children. While parents relaxed and ate their meals, kids could play in colorful climbing structures, jungle gyms, and slides.
The introduction of the PlayPlace solidified McDonald's reputation as a destination for families on a budget, as many were during the 1970s amid a time of financial insecurity, high inflation, and the Vietnam War.
Donald Preston/The Boston Globe/Getty Images
Annette Scaramozza and Anthony Francis are pictured at their wedding ceremony in a McDonald's in 1975.
Popular Products
No popular products available in this category.