The Mystique of Route 66
Foreign tourists and local preservationists are bringing stretches of the storied roadway back to life
- By David Lamb
- Photographs by Catherine Karnow
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2012, Subscribe
Since I discovered U.S. Route 66 as a teenage hitchhiker, I’ve traveled it by Greyhound bus and tractor-trailer, by RV and Corvette and, once, by bicycle. Recently, when I wanted to return for another look, I headed straight for my favorite section, in Arizona, stretching from Winslow west to Topock on the California border. The last 160 miles of that route constitute one of the longest surviving stretches of the original 2,400-mile highway.
I’m happy to report that Route 66’s obituary—written repeatedly since 1984, when the opening of I-40 enabled motorists to make the trip from Chicago to Los Angeles on five connecting interstates—was premature. What John Steinbeck called the Mother Road had been reborn, not quite with the character it once had, but with enough vitality to ensure its survival.
When I reached Seligman, I called Angel Delgadillo at his home. He set his tenor sax aside to pedal his bike the few blocks to his barbershop and settled into his hair-cutting chair, a cup of coffee in hand. “You know,” he said, “even the Greyhound abandoned us” after I-40 opened. “So I sit here today and say to myself, ‘It’s pretty unreal how we’ve brought 66 back to life.’ ” Seligman has 500 residents—and 13 souvenir shops selling Route 66 memorabilia.
“We’ve got a tour bus pulling up,” his daughter Myrna shouted from the adjacent gift store. Delgadillo, who is 84, bounded out of his chair, wearing a smile as wide as a crescent moon, and rushed to greet a group of German tourists, shaking hands and slapping backs. “Good morning, good morning! Welcome home.” Home? They gave him a quizzical look, not understanding that to Delgadillo, Route 66 is a quintessential home to all the world’s wanderers, even though he himself had never strayed far from it.
The tourists loaded up on postcards, Route 66 bumper stickers, road signs shaped like shields and black-and-white photographs of dusty Ford Model Ts chugging through Seligman in the 1930s, canvas water bags slung on their hoods to keep radiators from overheating. I asked one of the visitors, a 40-ish man named Helmut Wiegand, why in the world a foreigner would choose this road for a vacation over Las Vegas, New York City or Disney World. “We all know 66 from the old TV series about two lost young men traveling it in a Corvette,” he said. “For us, 66 is a connection with America. It’s your most famous street, symbolic of your freedom, your restlessness, your quest for new opportunity.”
As the travelers returned to their bus, Delgadillo shook hands with each of them. He was born in Seligman, the son of a railroad man who owned a pool hall and barbershop but had a hard time supporting his family of seven. “In ’39 Dad built a trailer for our Model T, loaded it up and shuttered the windows of our house,” he said. “We were ready to join the Okies and go to California.” But his three brothers had formed an orchestra, with 12-year-old Angel on the drums, and the boys got a job performing in a local club. For the next four decades, they played at high-school dances, American Legion halls and VFW lodges, and community events along Route 66. “The highway saved us,” said Delgadillo, who is now known locally as “the Angel of Route 66” for his preservation efforts.
The road west from Seligman cuts through the Hualapai Indian Reservation and desert plateaus covered with juniper and mesquite. Red-rock cliffs thrust skyward on the horizon. In the 1850s, U.S. Navy Lt. Edward Beale traveled this route, along centuries-old Indian trails, with 44 men and 25 camels imported from Tunisia. Beale and his men created the first federally funded wagon road across Arizona, from Fort Defiance to the mouth of the Mojave River in California. The first telegraph lines to penetrate the Southwest territories soon followed, as did settlers in covered wagons and then railroads. Finally, in 1926, black Model Ts came chugging along an intermittently paved road designated as Route 66. It wasn’t the first road across the West; the Lincoln Highway, known as the Father Road, was dedicated in 1913, running 3,389 miles from New York City’s Times Square to San Francisco’s Lincoln Park. But 66 became synonymous with wanderlust and discovery.
For Cyrus Avery, the new road was a dream come true. A visionary Tulsa businessman and civic leader, Avery had persuaded federal officials designing the nation’s first comprehensive highway system to move the proposed Chicago-Los Angeles route south of the Rocky Mountains so it traveled through his hometown. Oklahoma ended up with 432 miles of Route 66, more than any state except New Mexico; 24 miles of the road snaked along Tulsa County’s residential and commercial streets. The thoroughfare spurred the development of a city that had, Avery would later recall, “no electric lights and pigs running on the streets” in the early 1900s. A few years ago the city of Tulsa purchased two acres of blighted land near the Cyrus Avery Memorial Bridge spanning the Arkansas River and built a plaza and skywalk. But the centerpiece of the $10 million-plus project will be a Route 66 museum and interpretive center, still in the planning stages.
The last time I traveled the road, crossing the open range and Painted Desert of northern Arizona in 1995, Winslow was a dying town. Route 66, which had become 2nd and 3rd streets, was a shambles of closed shops and nasty-looking bars. The magnificent La Posada, last of the famous Fred Harvey hotels built between Chicago and Los Angeles for rail and Route 66 travelers, had been closed in 1957 and converted into offices for the Santa Fe Railway. The Posada’s splendid murals, depicting desert flowers and Southwestern landscapes, had been painted over. The soaring timbered ceiling had disappeared under tiles fitted with fluorescent lights. The lobby was turned into a dispatch center for trains and the ballroom partitioned into cubicle offices. The original museum-quality furnishings, designed or selected by the building’s creator, Mary Elizabeth Jane Colter, regarded by many to be the Southwest’s greatest architect, had been auctioned off or given away. In 1992, even the Santa Fe Railway gave up on the place, reportedly offering it to the city for $1. Winslow said no thanks.
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Comments (24)
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It's too bad a way wasn't found to preserve Fred Harvey's The Havasu. I was disappointed to find it had been demolished on my last trip through Seligman.
Posted by Cathryn on May 10,2012 | 01:57 PM
I lived in Seligman for 2 1/2 years. The time I spent there changed my life. Living in Seligman is like going back in time. A time period worth remembering. The movie "Cars" is based on Seligman and captures the essence of Seligmand well. Like Sally the sport car says in the movie "I would of loved to seen it in it's hayday".
Posted by Michelle Clark on February 13,2012 | 02:14 PM
Just drove from St Louis to the Painted Desert in January. My fiance and I are now moving this month to be near to the road. It has this magical draw, one that is so powerful it is difficult to ignore! thank you for the article@
Posted by Brendan Ryan on February 5,2012 | 12:18 AM
The Canves bags on the hood orniment.. was not for cooling the radiator, it was to cool the water for drinking..These were used all over the southwest,,even hung from the neck collar of a horse team to have cool water to drink..evaportation would cool the water..
Posted by Bill Johnston on February 3,2012 | 02:46 PM
I went to high school in Ash Fork, Az. The divided highway, Route 66 went right through town. It was after I graduated in 1962 and moved to Maryland, route 40 came to Arizona and bypass our little town. I vist Ash Fork often and see the changes created by route 40.
Posted by Rita McGinness on February 1,2012 | 10:32 PM
I just bicycled Rt 66 from S. California to Oklahoma City. My favorite stretch was from Seligman AZ till it hits I-40. The rolling hills, Bermashave signs, Train Engineers blowing the horn for ya and so many other incredible sites made it my favorite memory. Eat at the Rt 66 Roadkill Cafe in Siligman (Chicken fried steak).
Posted by Ab Kastl on February 1,2012 | 05:26 PM
As someone who has done 2 tours with Adventure Cycling (nee Bikecentennial), I can vouch for their skills in route-building. (For the record, I did their Golden Spokes East tour in 1976 and then the big one, the original Trans America Trail, in 1980). I enjoyed myself so much on those tours that once they offered Life Memberships, I signed up right away. I might just have to get myself back into shape so I can ride the 66. The article didn't mention it (maybe to not sound like he was going overboard with the endorsements), so I will list it: the adventure cycling website is www.adventurecycling.org. They do other tours besides Trans America routes.
Posted by Stephen - NYC on February 1,2012 | 11:11 AM
Believe you find more original 66 in Oklahoma that you can drive on. There is a section of the original one-lane part of 66 south of Miami. Stop at the Ku-Ku Drive-in and ask Gene.
Posted by Dan on January 31,2012 | 10:19 PM
WHERE CAN I GET A MAP OF ROUTE 66?
Posted by LAURA VACKICEV on January 31,2012 | 09:39 PM
My husband and I have travled the route meny times in our 55 Ford crown victoria.We meet meny wonderful people along the way like howard Lynch who ran the musumen in Kanas who is no longer with us.Stayed at meny wonderful places,like the boots Motel,I sat outside long after everyone went to sleep writing my thoughts on paper about the whole route 66 trip.It was the best trips we ever took and We love it just as much every time we go.It is a place and time like no other and will always have a special place in our hearts!!
Posted by lorrie&Dave Petty on January 29,2012 | 08:31 PM
Thanks for the story. I travelled a bit of Route 66 during my 2011 retirement tour of North America in my 1968 MGB (see my blog mgb68.wordpress.com). My greatest memory is of the many, many wonderful people I met along the way. Williams, Arizona was one of my favorite route 66 stops. I agree the magic is stiil out there but it takes some searching. Regards, Peter Young, Kingston Ontario Canada.
Posted by Peter Young on January 28,2012 | 11:20 AM
I thumbed 66 from Oklahoma City to Los Angeles in Sep. of '46. At that time one had to take one's place amongst platoons of hitchhikers along the way and wait one's turn, all driven by a rebirth fantasy of going to Los Angeles
Posted by Richard Erle on January 28,2012 | 09:41 AM
We first traveled '66 in 1961, going the wrong direction..
from LA to St. Paul. Saw all the "old places," Kingman, Peach Springs, Seligman, Flagstaff (and Winona). Ten years later came the opportunity to move down that road like a dust bowl refuge. With camper & U-Haul we grabbed it and have become AZ pioneers (according to our lifetime hunting and fishing license)!!
Posted by Louis Barkemeyer on January 27,2012 | 09:03 PM
My husband and I traveled as much of Route 66 as we could get to in '94. A winding road in Oklahoma was so lovely, filled with the scent of wild roses. I remember a motel in Tucumcari New Mexico, named the Blue Bird. A lot of the road was rather broken up in Texas, and came to a dead end somewhere in there.
My husband had traveled the road many times in the late '30s when he was, as they said then bumming around the country. The road was new then, and the world was young too. The horrors of world War II were not yet upon us either, nor the following wars either. His dad came west well before Route 66 was built, in 1927 it was. He was shot at coming over Cajon Pass by bandits, but he made it to Montebello. My husband's mother and the children followed a few months later by train.
Posted by Rosella Alm on January 27,2012 | 08:03 PM
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