Route 66 was a mostly two lane highway that extended from Chicago to Los Angeles, through Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California, before gradually giving up to the modern interstate. Most of the old pavement is still there, and can be followed with the right maps and directions. I drove the entire length of old 66 in 2012, and invite you to follow along!
Saturday, October 13, 2012
Oklahoma Route 66 - Erick
ERICK, OKLAHOMA. Decaying sign for the West Winds Motel, now sitting out on the lawn by the former motel office.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Erick
ERICK, OKLAHOMA. A four legged resident of Erick watches as the traffic on Route 66 goes by. And for the mailman.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Erick
ERICK, OKLAHOMA. The streets of Erick are wide and friendly, so take a dusty walk through an old western town.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Erick
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Harley and Annabelle, the Mediocre Music Makers in 2007 |
Oklahoma Route 66 - Erick
ERICK, OKLAHOMA. The sign out on the street said
OPEN, but the Sandhills Curiosity shop was all locked up on a Sunday
morning. Despite some serious health issues for Annabelle, I've heard
that the Russells have been entertaining Route 66 visitors this past
summer, so I pray the couple were not dealing with anything serious that
day, just sleeping in or at church.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Erick
ERICK, OKLAHOMA. The Sandhills Curiosity shop
in Erick, Oklahoma, is another MUST see on your trip, as intense a Route
66 experience as it gets, inside and out. A performance by the Mediocre
Music Makers, Harley and Annabelle Russell, who run the shop, will be
one of the highlights of your trip. Otherwise, not much else will be
happening in Erick, known as the hometown of country music singers Sheb
Wooley and Roger Miller.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Sayre
SAYRE, OKLAHOMA. The Stovall Theater opened as
movie house in 1955, and it operated until a fire closed it down some
twenty years ago. It is now being restored as a community theater.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Sayre
SAYRE, OKLAHOMA. Lots of highways for such a
small town. Someone in Sayre needs to nail a 66 shield up there, as
"Business Loop 40" just doesn't do it for me.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Sayre
SAYRE, OKLAHOMA. The First National Bank on
Main Street, and a traffic light just for me. I enjoyed my hike through
Sayre's historic downtown district, but it was absolutely deserted on a
Sunday morning.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Sayre
SAYRE, OKLAHOMA. A preview of Southwestern
sights to come on Route 66 at the Western Motel in Sayre. The cactus and
desert neon sign is one of my favorites.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Canute
CANUTE, OKLAHOMA. Looking today more like a private residence, the Washita Motel can be positively identified only by looking closely at that faded sign.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Canute
CANUTE, OKLAHOMA. The Cotton Boll Motel in
Canute was opened in 1960 by two former cotton farmers, Woodrow and
Viola Penick. Their new business was successful until the interstate
bypassed the town in the 1970's, and they sold the motel in 1979. The
new owners turned the motel into a private residence, but the old neon
sign is still there.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Clinton
Oklahoma Route 66 - Weatherford
WEATHERFORD, OKLAHOMA. Windmills on Route 66.
Would have been an odd site back in the heyday of 66, a period of
abundant energy and cheap gas.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Weatherford
WEATHERFORD, OKLAHOMA. Heading west out of
Weatherford, one is immediately tempted to visit the Cherokee Trading
Post in nearby Clinton. A billboard behind a wire fence is so Route 66.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Hydro
HYDRO, OKLAHOMA. A lonely shield on a bypassed Route 66, ignored by passing truckers on the interstate with no interest in a two-lane highway.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Hydro
HYDRO, OKLAHOMA. I was chained to a desk for
many years, so I never got a chance to meet Lucille Hamons, a 66 Hall of
Famer who ran her over-the-pumps style gas station for many years.
Lucille and her husband Carl bought the neat little 1920's
gas station in 1941 where they lived dangled right over the pumps, but
not happily ever after. Not long after the arrival of the interstate,
which nearly wiped out the business, Carl bought a truck and took off in
it, abandoning Lucille and the station. But the gritty Lucille
persevered and ran the business for another 59 years, right up until her
passing in 2000.
Oklahoma Route 66 - Hydro
HYDRO, OKLAHOMA. The pole over the pumps at
Lucille's Gas Station once held a Conoco sign, but a windstorm broke
that sign loose and blew it down the highway. Lucille replaced it with
one that reminded everyone that Route 66 was still there.
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