Eating well
Filling the tank
Getting gorgeous
Buying some odds and ends
Toasting the ’60s
A dollar really went far in the 1960s — much farther than it does today. The lists in this chapter may have you really pining for the good-old days. But before you get too nostalgic, remember that the median household income in 1967 was $7,143, and the minimum wage was $1.40 per hour. Of course, on the other hand, that same year, an average American home cost $24,600, and a Love Bug (a Volkswagen Beetle) could be had for a mere $1,500.
Back in the ’60s, people pulled up to the gas pump and actually said to the attendant, “Gimme a dollar’s worth.” In 1965, this amount could get you quite far, because gas was only 31 cents a gallon (it was up to 35 cents by 1969). To make sure your car would always start, you could get jumper cables for a buck, and if you wanted to keep your ride looking great, you could buy car wax for a mere 99 cents.
In 1963, you could send letters to 20 friends for $1, or if you didn’t have a whole lot to say, you could send 25 postcards. But by 1968, prices went up — it cost 5 cents to send a postcard and 6 cents to send a letter.
Actually, in 1965 you could score a meal with a double-decker burger for a buck! If you wanted to go out to dinner, you could eat at Oscar’s (a family restaurant chain in California), and for $1 you’d get a double-decker hamburger with French fries, salad, and ice cream for dessert. For only 30 cents more, you could get a complete fried chicken or shrimp dinner (also with fries and salad). Pie was only 35 cents a slice, an ice-cream sundae was 40 cents, and coffee or a soft drink cost 10 cents. By the way, if you wanted to grab a quick bite at a lunch counter, you could get a hot dog and a coke for 49 cents.
In 1965 you could get a few food items for close to $1, but for the most part, the things you’d need to buy cost quite a bit less. So fill your vintage shopping cart with these items:
Gallon of milk: 95 cents
One regular size bottle of Heinz ketchup: 22 cents
One dozen eggs: 53 cents
One-ounce Hershey bar: 5 cents (Although the price remained the same, the size of the bar shrunk to 7/8 ounce in 1966 and 3/4 ounce in 1968.)
Pillsbury cake mix: 25 cents
Pound of pork chops: $1.03
Pound of sirloin steak: 85 cents
Six-pack of Pepsi: 59 cents
Then as now, Americans wanted to look their best. Here’s what you’d have to part with to do just that in 1965:
Package of ten Gillette razor blades: 99 cents
Can of shaving cream: 59 cents
Tube of toothpaste: 55 cents
Can of hair spray: 47 cents
Revlon lipstick: $1.25
Revlon nail enamel: 75 cents for crème and 90 cents for frosted
Got a headache? In 1965, you could get 100 aspirin for only $1. You could also stock your medicine cabinet on the cheap with these other meds:
Generic cold relief capsules: 60 cents for two packages of 12
Cough drops: 23 cents for three packages
Cough syrup: 59 cents for a bottle
Contact decongestant tablets: 77 cents for a package of ten
In 1965, if you wanted a good dose of the printed news, you could get the New York Times for 10 cents from Monday through Saturday, but you’d need to spend 30 cents for the Sunday edition. If you were into the local news, you’d spend a bit less: The Daily Record , a newspaper in Morristown, New Jersey, sold for 7 cents. For another view of the world, you could get a copy of Life magazine, Time magazine, or Sports Illustrated for 35 cents.
The mid-’60s gave rise to a new fad for a disposable society — paper clothing. As a promotion, in 1966 the Scott Paper Company sold paper dresses for only $1.25, and they sold like hotcakes! Just think — if the dress was too long, you could have a minidress just by using a pair of scissors. However, these dresses were just as expensive to produce as regular dresses, which sold for quite a bit more, so the fad quickly died out.
Most home decor items cost more than $1, but you might like to know what it cost to do a little redecorating in 1965. You could buy a sheet for $1.76, two bedspreads for $5, a lamp for $1 (or you could spend up to $5 if you wanted to splurge), and Oneida dinnerware for $3.98–5.40 per place setting.
The best news of all . . . you could get a six-pack of your average American beer for just 99 cents!