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Though all of the eight states along your route 66 holiday display pride in ownership of their piece of the pavement, Oklahoma seems to do it the best. Perhaps that is as it should be, given that the Mother Road was born in Oklahoma when Cyrus Avery of Tulsa conceived of the idea to link Chicago all the way to Los Angeles. Moreover, Oklahoma has more miles of the original highway than any other state (over 400), they were the first to install historic markers along the old route, and the first to have a state-sponsored Route 66 museum.
Every Route 66 state has its own unique sights and special contributions to the history and lore (or is that lure?) of Route 66, but only in Oklahoma do the elements of iconic buildings, roadside attractions, people and history come together in such overwhelming abundance. Along your Route 66 trip in Oklahoma you can explore such sites as Arcadia’s Round Barn, Catoosa’s Blue Whale, Claremore’s Will Rogers Memorial, Foyil’s Totem Pole Park, Stroud’s Rock Café and both the Oklahoma Route 66 Museum in Clinton and the National Route 66 Museum in Elk City.
Oklahoma is also home to the National Highway 66 Association, who is responsible for the promotion of the Mother Road across all eight states, and the International Route 66 festival is held annually each June in Tulsa.
This road, which evolved from the early wagon trails of the 1800s, cuts a diagonal path through the rolling hills of northeast Oklahoma to the center of the state, before heading westward to the Texas line. Along the way, the Mother Road provides an abundance of vintage buildings, roadside attractions and friendly people, who are more than ready to share their experiences of the old Mother Road.
Though Route 66 is closely aligned with I-44 and I-40 across the state, you can travel almost the entire path on the vintage highway, jogging over and under the interstates. From the Kansas State Line all the way to El Reno, most of old Route 66 is designated as a state highway.As you travel along your Route 66 holiday you will first come to the small town of Quapaw that displays several nice murals on its buildings and is home to the Spooklight, a dancing ball of light seen on a bluff called Devil's Promenade. Then continue on through man-made mountains of chat, left over from the profitable lead and zinc mining era, to nearby Commerce, the home town of Mickey Mantle. Soon you will come upon Miami, the first town established in Indian Territory, where you will see the beautiful Coleman Theatre built in 1929. Just outside of Miami is the last section of the original nine- foot wide "Ribbon Road" that is listed as an Oklahoma National Historic Landmark. This remarkable piece of vintage pavement zigzags for 13 miles between Miami and Afton.
When you reach Afton this small town provides a vintage peek at what Route 66 must have been like long ago when you spy the remains of Rest Haven Motel and the restored Afton Station. In Vinita, the world’s largest McDonalds straddles I-44, but satisfy your hunger at Clanton's Café, operated by four generations of the same family. Vinita starts you on a trail through several small towns including White Oak, Chelsea, Bushyhead and Foyil, where a wonderful side trip presents itself to Ed Galloway's Totem Pole Park, just four miles east of town. Here you can see the world's largest concrete totem pole, built over an eleven year period from 1937 to 1948, along with a wide array of other folk art sculptures.
Continue on through Claremore, the hometown of Will Rogers, on your way to Catoosa, where the old Blue Whale attraction is a must see. Once a stand alone town outside of Tulsa, Catoosa is now but a suburb of the quickly growing "Tulsey Town." Tulsa provides many views of the old Mother Road with vintage motels dotting 10th and 11th streets, as well as art deco buildings downtown. Beyond Tulsa, Route 66 provides another stretch of small towns including Sapulpa, home of the original Rock Creek Bridge, Kellyville, and Bristow, where you can chow down on a delicious pork rib dinner plate at Russ' Ribs.
Nearby Depew will present a view of several vintage buildings in its tiny downtown district before entering Stroud, the home of an old Route 66 icon, the Rock Café. Soon you will pass through Davenport before rolling into Chandler, the town of the last old-west gunfight that took the life of lawman Bill Tilghman. Here, you can also see the old Lincoln Motel, established in 1939 and a restored Phillips 66 cottage style station. West of town is an old Meramec Caverns barn, the last one remaining on Oklahoma’s Mother Road.
The small towns of Warwick, Wellston and Luther provide a number of vintage peeks at old stations and tourist camps before entering Arcadia, city of the Round Barn. Built in 1898, the Arcadia Round Barn is the most photographed sight on the Mother Road. At Edmond begins the suburbs of Oklahoma City. The Mother Road passes right by Oklahoma’s capital building, where oil rigs stood not so very long ago. As you begin to head out of the city, several old motels and restaurants begin to pop up. In the suburb of Warr Acres, an absolute "must see” is Ann’s Chicken Fry House, featuring all manner of Route 66 memorabilia and fronted by a classic 1950s police car, a pink Cadillac, and vintage gas pumps.
The wandering path soon finds you riding atop the Overholser Steel Truss Bridge in Bethany before entering Yukon, the hometown of Garth Brooks. At El Reno you’ll cross the old Chisholm Trail before entering more small towns – Calumet, Geary, and Bridgeport, now an official ghost town. Nearby Hydro is home to Lucille Hamons Station, built in 1927. Lucille was called the Mother of the Mother Road when she ran the station and store for 59 years right up until the day she died. Soon you will pass through Weatherford on your way to Clinton, where the first state-operated Route 66 Museum resides. It was also here that Elvis Presley once stayed at the Trade Winds Courtyard Inn.
Next,the ghost town of Foss presents itself before heading west through Canute on your way to Elk City, which provides another great Route 66 Museum at the Old Town Museum Complex. At nearby Sayre, the Beckham County Courthouse appeared in the movie, The Grapes of Wrath. I-40 killed two more Route 66 towns, those of Hext and Texola,on either side of Erick, hometown of Roger Miller. Travelling the Mother Road through Oklahoma provides a smorgasbord of restaurants, architectural styles, historic buildings and ruins, through its quaint small towns and metro cities. Enjoy its open stretches, winding roads,and many parks and lakes before heading onto the staked plains of Texas.