"There
are other two-lane blacktops out there and I am interested
in them, but none are quite like Sixty-Six," says
Michael Wallis, author of Route 66: The Mother Road and
numerous other books. "It could not have come at
a better time. It was born as the automobile was being
made affordable by Henry Ford, and then it saw us through
the Roaring '20s, the Dirty '30s when we paid our dues,
the war years, and then the heyday years when we were
celebrating America and wealth.
"Now it is in a new stage, a kind of retrospective
time, when Americans and people from abroad are looking
to the road to carry them on a journey into the past."
While Route 66 was officially born in 1926, when Congress
commissioned it, its path had seen travellers for decades
before. Like the Dixie Highway and other early paved
roads, Route 66 was laid out to follow traditional migratory
lines; unlike other highways of the day, though, it
did not move along a strictly linear course from one
spot to another. By following a succession of historic
trailsthe Pontiac Trail, the Wire Road, the Postal
Highway, the Grand Canyon Route and the Mormon TrailSixty-Six
loped diagonally across the country like a loosely draped
ribbon. From the cold gray of Lake Shore Drive to the
perennial sunshine of Santa Monica Boulevard, the ribbon
tied together a succession of rural and urban communities,
many of which had never had access to major national
thoroughfares before.
The route ran through eight statesIllinois,
Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona
and Californiaand it first made this connection
at a time when the automobile, for better and worse,
was beginning to stir the popular imagination.
"Automobiles influenced writers in their time
as much as they influenced the general public," says
Douglas Brinkley, author and director of the Eisenhower
Center for American Studies at the University of New
Orleans. "Emerson said, 'There is no truth but
in transit,' and that really encapsulates America's
love of the road. Being on the road is not just about
who you are going to meet or what you are going to see,
but how it will change you internally. Dreiser thought
the car would free people from their nine-to-five shackles.
What freedom, it seemed, to be able to get in a car
and just drive away! At the same time, though, Booth
Tarkington called the new creations 'metal demons.'
"Ever since then, writers have fallen into one
of those camps. Steinbeck and Kerouac, the great muses
of Sixty-Six, see the automobile as freedom, while writers
like Henry Miller and Hunter S. Thompson were, and are,
cynical about them."
There are, according to Brinkley, only two great transit
arteries in the United States that have taken on mythological
connotations: the Mississippi River and Route 66. And
while Mark Twain is the muse and mythmaker of one, Steinbeck
can claim the other. It was Steinbeck who christened
Sixty-Six with its best-known nickname, The Mother Road.
Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath was published
in 1939, and set in the '30s when the nation was gripped
in the Great Depression and the bread basket, the Central
Plains, were literally being blown away with the wind.
A brutal and lengthy drought had turned fertile dirt
into dust and sent thousands of proud farming families
on the road in search of not just a better life, but
survival.
These families, identical to Steinbeck's fictional
Joads, loaded their every possession onto ancient wrecks
of automobiles with paper-thin tires and leaky radiators,
and pointed their noses down Sixty-Six, eventually reaching
the fabled land of California. It was always a journey
of hope. Sometimes hope of a better life and hope of
opportunity, at other times merely the hope that the
rusting car would survive struggles up high mountain
passes and across sunbaked deserts.
Steinbeck described the road then: "66the
long concrete path across the country, waving gently
up and down on the map, from the Mississippi River to
Bakersfieldover the red lands and the gray lands,
twisting up into the mountains, crossing the Divide
and down into the bright and terrible desert, and across
the desert to the mountains again, and into the rich
California valleys."
"We like to look back at the good times now,
the nostalgia and kitsch of the road, but you can't
paint a picture of some idyllic corridor," Wallis
says. "What Steinbeck described was there, then
and later, as well. Overheated radiators, speed traps,
bad food, blistering heat and no A/C, questionable peopleit
was all there. But that is why the road endures, because
you can find all these different periods tangible on
Route 66. When I am out there on the road in Oklahoma,
I can see the Joads. I can feel the hunger of their
journey to the land of milk and honey. I can see and
feel everything that happened there on the varicose
and tattered strip of concrete and asphalt."
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