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The "Mother Road" hauled it all, traversing the American West from Chicago to Santa Monica Beach, the last 350 miles through Southern California. For settlers, Depression-era "Okies" and "Arkies," and post-World War II families bound for suburbia, Route 66 was a migration funnel for generations. Wending through the mountains and badlands of San Bernardino County into Los Angeles County, Route 66 became a state of mind and a catchphrase for travelers everywhere, especially after singer Bobby Troupe popularized the hit song "(Get Your Kicks on) Route 66" and actors Martin Milner and George Maharis hit the road with the ragtop down and the shades on in the namesake television series that seemed to go anywhere every week. The shield of the Route 66 sign has become iconography for the growth of Southern California's economy, population, popularity, and folklore.
"The purpose of this project is to create a foundation for future projects that will help preserve historic resources and tell a more complete story of Route 66 and the experiences of American Indian communities and individuals. The project consisted of a literature search, creation of a database of extant resources relating to American Indian experience of Route 66, establishing contact with tribal representatives, an analysis of the literature search, and providing recommendations for future research.
Begun in 1926 to connect Chicago to Los Angeles, Route 66 was the country's first major east-west thoroughfare. By 1930 it was an important route for both truckers and travellers alike, and in 1939 it became known as 'The Mother Road' thanks to John Steinbeck's classic The Grapes of Wrath. Over the years, hundreds of thousands of Americans travelled this great road from those heading west during the Great Depression to postwar families taking road trips across the country – but by the 1970s four-lane highways, expressways, and tollways had largely supplanted it, and Route 66 fell into disrepair. In this book, authority David Knudson traces the fascinating story of The Mother Road from origins to decline, including the roadside attractions and cottage industries it spawned and the efforts to save and restore it.
"In 2008, Route 66 was included on the World Monuments Watch, a biennial program that raises awareness about historic places at risk from the forces of environmental, economic, and social change. Through the Watch, World Monuments Fund (WMF) was able to partner with the U.S. National Park Service Route 66 Corridor Preservation Program, a collaboration that has capitalized on the respective strengths of each institution in service to the long-term stewardship of the Mother Road" -- p. 4.
Dedek paints a complex portrait of America's most famous highway.