...therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls.
It tolls for thee.
...therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls.
It tolls for thee.

In late June 2001 the store opened again for a time as fireworks outlet, but then and was boarded up. Sometime after that date the store was demolished, and the land is now for sale for redevelopment, leaving another memory for Lost Indiana.

Back in 1954, though, Ray’s future wasn’t so bright. Working through a series of different jobs, in the mid 1920s he hired on as a salesman at Lily Tulip, a paper cup manufacturer. Unfortunately, no one bought paper cups at the time. Ray worked hard for a decade to convince soda fountain operators they could earn more money by preparing “take out” beverages - served in Ray’s cups.
Just before the war, he went into partnership with a man who invented a machine called the “multimixer”. It produced several milkshakes at once using spinning metal spindles arrayed around a center motor. Initially Ray thought it was a great way to sell more paper cups, but after one of his major customers switched suppliers, he became the exclusive national agent for the machine.
Right after the war, he enjoyed several years of strong sales, but change was in the air. His best customers were soda fountains - and they were being closed at an alarming rate. One customer caught his attention, though - a hamburger stand in San Bernardino, California that kept eight Multimixers humming at once.
After taking the red-eye flight to California from Chicago, Ray saw first-hand the operation that would change his - and Americas - future. Brothers Dick and Mac McDonald had closed their popular drive in and converted it into a pure self -service operation serving a simple menu of 15-cent hamburgers, french fries, milkshakes, Coca-Cola and coffee. Initially slow to start, their efficient production operation was now serving hundreds more customers each day.
Ray signed on as a franchise agent and returned home to Chicago to develop his first store in Des Plaines, Illinois. After overcoming issues with the original store design - like where to put the furnace, unnecessary in southern California - his new store was successful almost from day one.
Ray was the hardest working member of the staff, and was fanatical about cleanliness and efficiency. He could sometimes be seen cleaning and sanitizing the dirty mop heads during slow times.
He hooked up with Harry Sonneborn, a financial expert, who devised a unique scheme whereby McDonald’s would purchase land for a new store, and lease it back to the operator for a fee, in addition to a percentage of store sales. This let determined entrepreneurs enter the business more quickly, without having to come up with substantial capital in advance. The method allowed McDonald’s to grow fast, and was shared by their major competitor at the time, Burger Chef . Between the expansion of McDonald’s out of their home base in Chicago and the Indianapolis-based Burger Chef, Indiana quickly became the nexus of fast food.
One of the first McDonald’s locations opened along the new I-65 freeway between those two hamburger capitals was restaurant in the small town of Lebanon. At the time, Indianapolis was still too small to call Lebanon a suburb yet.
The Lebanon, Indiana McDonald’s - and it’s sign - in the mid 1990’s and today.
(Click for a larger version)
Photo courtesy of John and Sonya Cirillo.
In the early 1970s, McDonald’s underwent a massive program to demolish restaurants of the old, double-arch design and replace them with the familiar mansard-roof design we usually see today. Customers were seeking “family dining”, full service restaurants, and passing the open-air drive up stores to get what they wanted. The Lebanon location has this 1970’s design, though its actual construction date is difficult to pinpoint.
However, the true jewel of the Lebanon McDonald’s was the sign. This was an original “Speedy” sign - named for the character atop the sign that would “run” at night via multiple neon tubes. The sign dates from the late 1950s, and had been fully restored and mounted in front of the otherwise normal building.
The inside of the store carried this nostalgic neon theme though displays of 1950’s icons and a large juke box.
By the late 1980s, McDonald’s had trounced most of its competition and reigned as the king of fast food. But by the late 1990s, consumer tastes were changing yet again, and fast food in general began to decline in favor of “fast casual” restaurants that combined gourmet sandwiches and broader menus with the speed of traditional fast food. In an effort to reinvent itself, McDonald’s has begun replacing older design stores with several new styles - including one that is reminiscent of the original 1950’s design.
Inside the closed store. Remarkably, with the exception of several missing tabletops (upper right), a section of the menu board removed from the wall (lower right) and the fact that most of the kitchen equipment is missing, very little looks out of place. Note there are still cups in the dispenser next to the soda fountain in the drive-thru window area (lower left).
(Click any picture for a larger version)
Frequently these new stores are built on the site of the old ones, but current owner of the Lebanon franchise elected to take advantage of better traffic flow patterns on the East side of the freeway. That left the old McDonald’s store to decay as a remnant of fast food history.
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