A look at life in metro Phoenix in the 1960s

Central Avenue in Phoenix, shown in the early 1960s, was originally called Centre, then Center

A photo from 1960 shows Phoenix’s Good Samaritan Hospital

Luke Air Force Base, shown in this 1960s-era photo, long has been an economic engine for the West Valley. It remains a key pilot-training center.

Phoenix’s Center Street Bridge was irreparably damaged by a flood in the 1960s.

People walk through the subway between the north and south wings of the Capitol in March 1960.

Francine Hardaway hangs out while John Hardaway works on the Sunnyslope dome in the late 1960s.

Interstate 17, the Black Canyon Freeway, was the first freeway in Phoenix. This 1960 photo shows a stretch from Bethany Home Road to Grand Avenue.

Before being renamed the Orpheum Theatre was known as the Palace West Theatre in the 1960s.

A roundup of the Dobson sheep herd near Elliot Road and the railroad tracks east of Arizona Avenue in the early 1960s.


Mesa High School students watch the filming of “The Explosive Generation” in December 1960. The crew of the low-budget movie, filmed in black and white, was in town for only two days of shooting. But in that short time, about 350 students had a chance to meet and mingle with the stars and get screen time, if for just a brief moment.

Three-wheeled golf carts were popular in Sun City during the 1960s.

Unknown subject standing on the corner with the Scottsdale Savings Building in the background. In 1960 it also houses the Wigwam Department Store.

