Ron,
At 10 gpm flow, this would be say a shower and filling a washer, you would loose 55.5 psi for the 1500 feet of pipe. This does not include the loss of pressure through the water meter, valves, difference in elevation, etc. If the street pressure is day 60 psi, you can see you will have less then 5 psi on your end of the line.
When you only flow say a shower the flow is perhaps 3 gpm, the more flow the higher the loss of pressure. Based on the table Rat included in his post, for schedule 40 plastic pipe at 1 gpm the loss is .03 for every 100 feet, at 5 gpm it is .66, 7 1.24, and 10 gpm 2.40, as the flow increases so does the friction loss through the pipe.
As far as putting in the tanks, I will leave that for others, but it sounds like a fix. It would mean less tractor seat time /forums/images/graemlins/mad.gif
and not as much fun as digging a 1500 foot trench 3-4 feet deep. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif