

If you’re itching to hit the pavement this summer, there’s perhaps no better year to take a spin on Route 66. In honor of the iconic highway turning 100, cities and towns across the U.S. are celebrating throughout 2026, with official national events kicking off this week.
Road trippers coasting along the famed thoroughfare won’t be bored: Route 66 boasts more than 250 sites listed on the National Register of Historic Places, including diners, bridges, and historic hotels. But a century ago, it was just a patchwork of local, state, and national roadways made largely from materials like dirt, gravel, and bricks. Only 800 of its initial 2,448 miles were paved — it would take another 12 years to complete the rest.

However, the route, also known as the Mother Road, was groundbreaking for its time. Its primary predecessor, the Lincoln Highway, opened the door to cross-country travel, but mostly for wealthy folks who could afford the pricey vehicles of the 1910s. Route 66’s debut coincided with the automobile boom of the 1920s, which helped lower the cost of long-distance trips and enabled more drivers to get on the road.

When it received its official designation in the summer of 1926, the U.S. 66 Highway Association described it as “the shortest, best, and most scenic route from Chicago through St. Louis to Los Angeles,” per the National Park Service. It also served as a lifeline for residents in rural communities. In the eight states it passes through — Illinois, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California — it increased traffic to small towns, which helped boost population growth and economic development across the West.
In the ’30s, Route 66 became a saving grace for those looking to migrate westward and escape the Dust Bowl in the south-central U.S. This plight was famously documented in John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath.
“Highway 66 is the main migrant road,” he wrote, adding, “66 is the path of a people in flight, refugees from dust and shrinking land.”

During World War II, particularly after western states were identified as ideal locations for military training bases, the country relied on the highway to transport troops and defense supplies. And after the war was over, Route 66 experienced a tourism boom — inspiring the lyric “Get Your Kicks on Route 66” by jazz musician Bobby Troup.
And for those of us over a certain age, who can forget Martin Milner and George Maharis as two young adventurers who drove the road in their Chevrolet Corvette on Friday nights from 1960-1964. Despite the name of the series, most episodes did NOT take place on the historic road, but in 25 different U.S. states, all on location. TV viewers were treated to episodes filmed in Carson City, Los Angeles, Toronto, Santa Fe, Reno, Tucson, Dallas and many more locales.

For the first time, Americans were beginning to think about automotive travel on a mass basis. This is a period when Americans had vacations, thanks to the boom in manufacturing and unionization drives that helped people earn a decent salary. And they wanted to drive west in their new car on their vacation.
Many of the highway’s now-nostalgic rest stops thrived during the ’40s and ’50s — think diners,
gas stations, and convenient accommodation such as motels, auto camps, and motor courts. But 1956 marked the beginning of the end of Route 66’s glory days. The Federal-Aid Highway Act sparked the creation of nationwide interstate highways, which provided faster ways to cut across the U.S. but were often located away from small towns. By 1985, The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials voted to remove Route 66’s highway signs, and it was officially decommissioned. recognizing its historical and cultural significance, the U.S.

Congress passed the Route 66 Study Act in 1990, leading to the National Park Service’s Route 66 Special Resource Study U.S. National Park Service. This effort resulted in the creation of the Route 66 Corridor Preservation Program, aimed at preserving significant structures, features, and artifacts associated with the highway U.S. National Park Service. Today, surviving stretches, museums, and roadside attractions continue to celebrate Route 66 as a symbol of Americana and the nation’s automotive heritage
Last week, the centennial’s official kickoff event featured the National Route 66 Centennial Telegraph Ball, a concert, and a parade in Springfield, Missouri — and the nationwide festivities will include everything from an auto show to a “light capsule.”
Route 66 remains a testament to the evolution of American transportation, the rise of automobile culture, and the enduring allure of the open road. Its legacy continues to inspire travelers and historians alike, reflecting both the economic and cultural transformations of the 20th century.
Happy 100th Birthday, Route 66!
To stay up on our latest releases and have some fun, too, join our Facebook Reader Group HERE!
Born and raised in western Massachusetts, Jo-Ann Roberts was fascinated by America’s Old West and always felt she was destined to travel on a wagon train following the Oregon Trail. With her love of history and reading, she began reading historical romance during high school and college. Victoria Holt, Jude Deveraux, and Roseanne Bittner were among her favorites. Influenced by her father, she fell in love with John Wayne, James Garner, and her all-time favorite, James Stewart and grew up watching Wagon Train, Bonanza and Rawhide.
A firm believer in HEA with a healthy dose of realism, Jo-Ann strives to give her readers a sweet historical romance while imparting carefully researched historical facts, personalities, and experiences relative to the time period. Her romances take her readers back to a simpler time to escape the stress of modern life by living in a small town where families and friends help one another find love and happiness.
When she isn’t creating believable plots and relatable heroes and heroines, Jo-Ann enjoys spending time with her husband, children and grandson. She also enjoys baking, quilting and eating way too much chocolate.
After 38 years in public education in Connecticut and Maryland, she’s now calls North Carolina home.

My grandparents and father used Route 66 to migrate to California in the 1930s in search of work and a new life. Fort Worth to OK, then westward. The trip took a week and then some. Not quite The Grapes of Wrath, but darn close. I’ve written about it in my blog.
I would love to travel the whole length. I have only been on parts.
Growing up in Southern California during the 1950’s/60’s with parents from St. Louis and Chicago there were numerous road trips across the “Mother Road.” It was always fun to see what new attractions had been built since the last journey east. The monotonous stretches of highway across the deserts of Arizona and New Mexico made for a lo…ng trip. One must stop place every time, as we headed east and west, was a restaurant in Oklahoma that had the best fried chicken. The odd/funny names encountered along the way, tee pee motels, cowboys, cattle, sheep, the Grand Canyon, Petrified Forest, the Ozarks, Meramec Caverns, Fort Leonard Wood where my Dad went through training during WW II were just a few of the highlights from the road trips. I still remember crossing the mighty Mississippi and seeing steamboats for the first time as our trip continued on to the “Windy City.” Great memories! Thank-you for a very interesting post and taking me back to long gone days when life was so much easier.
Love the history. I’ve never traveled on it.
What an interesting story. Thank you for sharing. I have never been on it.
Hi, I have been on Route 66 from Texas to NM, AZ to California. Thats alot of towns. I Love the movie The Grapes of Wrath. Have a great day and a great weekend.
I’ve watched the TV show in reruns! I’ve also read a few books set along Route 66. I think it’d be a great road trip! Of course, I’d also have a great road trip just to get on it, since I live in FL!
Happy Birthday ? Route 66
We have traveled sections of it at times. It would be fun to drive it from beginning to end. We will likely cross it a time or two on our way to conventions this summer. The Lincoln Highway and Route 20 are two other roads I would like to drive from beginning to end. A friend has been active in documenting and gaining interest in Route 20.
Thanks for a very interesting post.