Dick and Mac McDonald

Dick and Mac McDonald

Richard "Dick" J. McDonald (February 16, 1909July 14, 1998) and Maurice "Mac" McDonald (November 26, 1902December 11, 1971) were two early American fast food pioneers, originally from Manchester, New Hampshire, who established the first McDonald's restaurant in 1940.

Family origins

The McDonald family were of Irish origin. In the 1910 U.S. Census, both brothers (Maurice as "Morris") appear in Manchester ward 8, Hillsborough County, New Hampshire, and their father Patrick J. McDonald is shown as originating from Ireland, having emigrated in 1877 as a baby. Their mother Margarete is also shown as Irish born, emigrating to the USA in 1884 as a child. The couple were earlier recorded on the 1900 US Federal Census in Rockingham County, New Hampshire. Patrick McDonald appears on the 1880 Census in Rockingham County, New Hampshire, aged seven, son of Michael and Mary McDonald, both born in Ireland in the 1840s, of Irish-born parents.

This has come under scrutiny with recent genealogy showing that the family apparently originated from Glencoe, Scotland. This was brought to light when McDonald's refused to put menus in Scottish Gaelic, and local people argued this was the McDonald ancestral home and not putting menus in Gaelic was an insult to the brothers' heritage. However, the McDonald brothers have a proven Irish genealogy. Fact|date=August 2008

History

Franchising

The brothers began franchising in 1953, beginning in Phoenix, Arizona with Dave Fox. At first, they only franchised the system, not the name and atmosphere of their restaurant. It's said that when Dick went to check on Dave, he was shocked to see an exact replica of his San Bernardino store, right down to the name "McDonald's." When he asked Fox why he had kept the same design and hadn't called the restaurant "Fox's," Dave said "Why change it? It's great as it is," and from then on the brothers started franchising the entire concept. Franchised restaurants were built to a standard design, created by Fontana, California architect Stanley Clark Meston and featuring the Golden Arches, which in the early days were literally two arches, one on each side of the building (see photo). The arches were lined with pink neon that flashed sequentially.

In 1954 a milkshake machine salesman, Ray Kroc, became inspired by the evident financial success of the brothers' concept, immediately grasping the restaurant's enormous potential. He partnered with the brothers, and within a few years turned their small restaurant into a huge franchise that would later become the McDonald's Corporation.Gross, Daniel. [http://www.wiley.com/legacy/products/subject/business/forbes/kroc.html Forbes' Greatest Business Stories of All Time: Ray Kroc] ; John Wiley & Sons; 1996.] The franchiser took only 1.9% of the gross sales, of which the McDonald brothers got 0.5%.

Kroc was not alone in seeing the potential of what the brothers had created; the Taco Bell, Hardee's, Burger Chef, Whataburger, and Burger King chains were founded by others who had visited McDonald's and attempted to duplicate it.

Kroc became frustrated with the brothers' willingness to accept their chain having only a handful of restaurants. In 1961, he purchased the company from the brothers. The agreement was for the McDonald Brothers to receive $2.7 million for the chain and to continue to receive an overriding royalty of 1% on the gross sales.

The agreement was a handshake agreement between the parties because Ray insisted he couldn't show the royalty to the investors he had lined up to capitalize his purchase. At the closing table, Ray became outraged that the brothers would not transfer to him the real estate and rights to the original unit. The brothers had told Ray that they were giving the operation, property and all, to the founding employees. Ray closed the transaction, then refused to acknowledge the royalty portion of the agreement because it wasn't in writing. He also opened a new McDonald's restaurant near the original one (now renamed "The Big M" as they had neglected to retain rights to the name) to force it out of business.

Although Kroc turned McDonald's into a global giant, its guiding principles remained largely unchanged from those the McDonald brothers had devised in 1948.

Endings

Mac McDonald died of lung cancer in 1971.

In 1984, Dick McDonald served the ceremonial 50,000,000,000th (50 billionth) McDonald's burger, having cooked the first one. [http://www.el-mundo.es/magazine/2004/244/1085657108.html picture] and story in Spanish language, May 30, 2004 at "El Mundo".]

In 1998 Richard McDonald worked with Ronald L. McDonald (an actual person in the McDonald family) to write "The Complete Hamburger." The book contains the history of McDonald's, as well as the history of the hamburger and the fast food industry. During the writing of the book, Dick and Ron requested use of archive photos from the McDonald's Corporation. When the corporation asked for and read a copy of the manuscript, they refused to allow the use of the photos. Their reasoning was that " [the book] was not flattering to Mr Kroc."

The book stated that Mr. Kroc's claims to being the founder of McDonald's were outrageous, and that neither Kroc nor McDonald's had the right to put brass plaques in every store stating that fact. The book also points out that the first McDonald's restaurant was not in Des Plaines, Illinois as many placemats in McDonald's restaurants claimed. After the book's publication, McDonald's Corporation explained that "Mr. Kroc was the founder of the corporation that exists today, and [that] Des Plaines was his first store." The book was reprinted in 2004 as "Ronald McDonald's International Burger Book."

Ronald also did an article on Richard for Icon Magazine just before Richard died.

Richard "Dick" McDonald died in Manchester, New Hampshire in 1998, at the age of 89. He is survived by his wife, Dorothy, a stepson, Gale French, and two grandchildren. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/132882.stm "Fast food supremo dies"] July 15, 1998. BBC News. Accessed January 6, 2007.]

The San Bernardino store was demolished in 1976 and the site is currently the corporate headquarters of the Juan Pollo restaurant chain. There is a private museum on site. [ [http://www.route-66.com/mcdonalds/ Welcome to the Historic Site Of The First McDonalds ] ] Only part of the original sign remains of the first McDonald's, but plans exist for a company-sponsored museum.

Ronald L. McDonald is still active in the hospitality industry and is living in Tampa, Florida. [ [http://www.ronaldmcdonald-author.com Ronald L. McDonald ] ]

Further reading

* McDonald, Ronald L. "Ronald McDonald's International Burger Book," (2004). ISBN: 1587362678.

Notes


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