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Alternate meanings of 'Route 66': New Jersey State Highway
666, Interstate 66, and a company named after the route
US Highway 66 or Route 66 was and is the most famous road
in the United States highway system and quite possibly the
most famous and storied highway in the world. US 66 originally
ran from Chicago, Illinois through Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma,
Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California before ending at
the beach at Santa Monica for a total distance of 2448 miles/3940
km.
Championed by Oklahoman Cyrus Avery in 1923 when the first
talks about a national highway system began, US 66 first opened
in 1926 as one of the original national arteries, although
it was not completely paved until 1938. Avery was adamant
that the highway have a round number and had proposed number
60 to identify it. Even though "US 60" was already
assigned to another highway, Avery went so far as to have
maps printed showing his road as US 60. Faced with defeat,
he relented and reviewed the numbers available to him. He
settled on "66" because he thought the double-digit
number would be easy to remember as well as pleasant to say
and hear.
The route was not straight, but intentionally linked many
small towns in the Midwest, Plains and Southwest. With its
essentially flat course and favorable weather, the highway
became popular as a truck route, thus contributing to the
growth of that industry.
After the end of the Second World War, US 66 became the road
of choice for returning GIs, and later, their families during
vacation season. This sharp rise in tourism in turn gave rise
to a burgeoning trade in all manner of roadside attractions
from teepee-shaped motels to frozen custard stands; Indian
curio shops to reptile farms. It was changes like these to
the landscape that further cemented 66's reputation as a near-perfect
microcosm of the culture of America, now linked by automobile.
Contents [showhide]
1 Early 20th Century American Pop Culture
2 The Fall of the "Mother Road"
3 Present-Day "Route 66"
4 Route 66 -- The Revival
5 Related U.S. routes
6 See also
7 External links
[edit]
Early 20th Century American Pop Culture
In 1946, jazz composer and pianist Bobby Troup wrote his best-known
song, "(Get Your Kicks On) Route 66" after driving
the highway himself to get to California. He presented it
to Nat King Cole who in turn made it one of the biggest hit
singles of his career. The title was suggested by Troup's
first wife, Cynthia, who accompanied him on the trip.
The lyrics read as a sort of mini-travelogue about the major
stops along the route, listing several cities and towns that
Route 66 passes through. Specifically mentioned, in order,
are St. Louis, Missouri, Joplin, Missouri, Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, Amarillo, Texas, Gallup, New Mexico. Flagstaff,
Arizona, Winona, Arizona, Kingman, Arizona, Barstow, California,
and San Bernadino, California.
Winona is the only town out of sequence in the list. It was
a very small settlement east of Flagstaff, and might have
been forgotten if not for the song's lyric, "Don't forget
Winona" intended to rhyme with "Flagstaff, Arizona."
In 1940, California writer John Steinbeck referred to 66
as the "Mother Road" and "the road of flight"
in The Grapes of Wrath, his seminal novel about the westward
migration of Oklahoma's Dust Bowl farmers to California's
San Joaquin Valley.
The highway also gave its name to a popular television show,
Route 66, seen from October 4, 1960 through 1964 on CBS. The
show featured Martin Milner and George Maharis as "Tod"
and "Buzz," two young men in a Corvette looking
for adventure along America's highways. Strangely, though
much of the program was filmed on location, rarely was it
shot along Route 66. The show's theme song, by Nelson Riddle,
was also a hit. Riddle was commissioned to write the theme
when CBS was informed that they could not obtain the rights
to the Bobby Troup song. Even though the fully-orchestrated
"Theme from Route 66" does not resemble the version
by Nat King Cole and his jazz quartet, there is an unmistakable
homage to the latter's piano solo throughout the number.
[edit]
The Fall of the "Mother Road"
Abandoned, fire-damaged Whiting Brothers gas station, New
Mexico. Conservation efforts are underway to preserve original
buildings such as this all along the route.The death knell
for Route 66 came in 1956 with the signing of the Interstate
Highway Act by President Dwight Eisenhower. As a five-star
general fighting in the European theater during the war, Eisenhower
was impressed by Germany's high-speed roadways, or "autobahns."
Eisenhower envisioned a similar system of roads for the U.S.
in which one could conceivably drive at high speed from one
end of the country to the other without stopping as well as
making it easier to mobilize troops in the event of a national
emergency.
During its nearly sixty-year existence, Route 66 was under
constant change. As highway engineering became more sophisticated,
engineers were constantly looking for more direct routes between
cities and towns. In fact, Kansas, with its roughly thirteen-mile-long
(21 km) stretch of US 66 slicing off the southeast corner
of the state near the Missouri and Oklahoma state lines, was
totally bypassed by the late 1940s as part of a quicker, shorter
route to Tulsa, Oklahoma. The stretch remains intact as Kansas
State Highway 66.
One of the most notable reroutes came in 1953 when a new
stretch of 66 more directly connected Kingman, Arizona to
Needles, California on the Colorado River. The bypassed stretch
through the Black Mountains of Arizona was fraught with sharp
hairpin turns and was the steepest along the entire route;
so much so that some early travelers, too frightened at the
prospect of driving such a potentially dangerous road, hired
locals to negotiate the winding grade. In some cases drivers
were forced to back up the route, not only because reverse
on most cars was more powerful than first gear, but also because
some cars had no fuel pump and relied on gravity to feed fuel
to the engine. The angle of the grade was steep enough to
starve those types of cars of fuel.
Bypassed too was the small mining town of Oatman, Arizona,
famous as the honeymoon stop of Clark Gable and Carole Lombard
after their whirlwind wedding in Kingman on March 18, 1939.
Oatman still clings to its Route 66 heritage more than half
a century after being bypassed. Later, in 1984, Arizona would
also see the final stretch of highway decommissioned with
the completion of Interstate 40 through Williams. Official
decertification of the highway by the federal government came
the following year.
[edit]
Present-Day "Route 66"
Today, more than eighty percent of the original route and
alternate alignments are still driveable with careful planning.
Although a great deal of the original roadway was covered
up by the interstates that replaced it or abandoned to nature,
some long, well-preserved stretches remain including one between
Baxter Springs, Kansas and Tulsa. The road through Oklahoma
is relatively flat and straight, and it was on this part of
66 that two chemical engineers were testing a new gasoline
from a Tulsa oil company in the late 1920s. The company car
they were driving ran exceptionally well on the new blend,
prompting the engineer in the passenger seat to exclaim that
the car was "going like sixty." His companion looked
at the speedometer and said that they were going more like
sixty-six miles per hour (106 km/h). The combination of the
highway number and the speed of the car led to the naming
of Phillips 66 gasoline, a brand still marketed today.
Modern-day sign in New Mexico, along a section of Route 66
named a National Scenic BywayA roughly 160-mile-long (257
km) segment in Arizona signed as Arizona State Highway 66
links Seligman to Kingman and is considered to be Route 66's
best-preserved stretch.
In California, where it is known by its pre-66 designation
of National Trails Highway, travelers can drive a continuous
stretch of approximately 150 miles (241 km) through the blazing
Mojave Desert between Mountain Springs Summit west of Needles
(where the Joad family camped out in The Grapes of Wrath after
facing an armed posse at the state line) all the way to Victorville.
Another surface street stretch between San Bernardino and
Pasadena retains its number as California State Highway 66.
In Pasadena, Route 66 was known as Colorado Boulevard, the
street on which the Tournament of Roses Parade takes place
every New Year's Day.
To approximate Route 66 via Interstate highways, take the
following:
Interstate 55 from Chicago to St. Louis, Missouri;
Interstate 44 from St. Louis to Oklahoma City;
Interstate 40 from Oklahoma City to its terminus in Barstow,
California;
Interstate 15 from Barstow to San Bernardino; and
Interstate 10 from San Bernardino to Santa Monica, where a
plaque commemorating the spot that was the western end of
the highway can be found at Palisades Park.
[edit]
Route 66 -- The Revival
In 1990, Route 66 associations were founded separately in
both Arizona and Missouri. Other groups in the other Route
66 states soon followed. The same year, the state of Missouri
declared Route 66 in that state a "State Historic Route".
The first "Historic Route 66" marker was erected
on Kearney Street at Glenstone Avenue in Springfield, Missouri
(now replaced, the original sign will be placed at Route 66
State Park near Eureka). Other historic markers now line -
at times sporadically - the entire 2400-mile length of road.
A section of the road in Arizona was placed on the National
Register of Historic Places, and work is under way in Missouri
to make the road a state scenic byway.
[edit]
Related U.S. routes
U.S. Highway 166
U.S. Highway 266
U.S. Highway 366
U.S. Highway 466
U.S. Highway 566
U.S. Highway 666
[edit]
See also
Route 66 State Park near Eureka, Missouri
Highway 61
Winslow, Arizona
Amboy, California
[edit]
External links
Route 66 :: Web Resources (http://www.synaptic.bc.ca/CriticalResources/Route-66.htm)
Including photographs, travelogues and online references.
National Historic Route 66 Federation (http://www.national66.com/)
California Route 66 Museum (http://www.califrt66museum.org/)
Article about Route 66 (http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=2590229&BRD=1409&PAG=461&dept_id=33071&rfi=8)
published in the Washington Missourian in 2001
This article is licensed
under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from the
Wikipedia
article "Route 66".
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