Book review: “Oklahoma Route 66″ (second edition) November 8, 2011
Posted by Ron Warnick in Books.5 comments
Longtime readers of Route 66 News know I’ve often cited Jim Ross’ “Oklahoma Route 66″ guidebook when reporting on the Mother Road’s history or its obscure alignments in the Sooner State.
Though that volume was published back in 2001, it remains one of the most indispensable Route 66 guides. However, getting hold of a copy was becoming increasingly difficult. It had gone out of print, and I recently saw on Amazon.com that new copies were going for as high as $300.
Fortunately, Ross has just published a second, revised edition of “Oklahoma Route 66″ (200 pages, soft cover, Ghost Town Press, $18.95).
Content-wise, it isn’t dramatically different from the first edition. All of the things that made the first book great — the impeccable research, a multitude of photographs, and Ross’ clean but engaging writing — are all there still.
However, the new version of “Oklahoma Route 66″ contains an especially notable improvement that makes the book even more useful.
The big change is that instead of the black-and-white photographs seen in the first edition, many of the images now come in full color. This obviously gives “Oklahoma Route 66″ a more appealing look:

But the color pages provide an even bigger benefit — Ross’ maps are now color-coded to indicate the varying alignments of Route 66 in Oklahoma. Here’s a close-up of one of those maps, showing the small town of Chelsea:

Green indicates the original 1926 path of Route 66. Red indicates the first realignment of the Mother Road. Blue signifies the second realignment. And it goes upward to orange, olive green, and dark brown.
The first edition’s maps were all printed in black-and-white. They were well-labeled, but congestion — especially in Oklahoma’s larger cities — sometimes made the maps hard to follow.
The color coding essentially eliminates this problem.
Going over the new volume, I appreciated again Ross uncovering Route 66′s numerous obscure paths. It reminded me that I still haven’t explored the old, obscure postal routes that served as Route 66 in the late 1920s in the western Oklahoma hamlets of Doxey and Delhi.
With that, buyers of “Oklahoma Route 66″ should heed this warning — don’t be surprised if you spend at least a week exploring all of Route 66′s many facets in the state.
But one of my favorite parts of the new “Oklahoma Route 66″ turns up in the preface, where Ross tries to say what Route 66 means to him. Part of the answer includes memories of family vacations in the 1950s, the “Route 66″ television drama, and the call of the open road. But then:
The sentimental part of me would not stop there, however. A more soulful, contemplative response would tell a tale of communion, one that occurs in quiet moments — usually at dusk — and takes place strictly between myself and the expanse of highway before me. It is then that the spirits of the road sometimes permit me to feel their fleeting embrace and with it the collective power of every story ever recorded by the silent, sturdy roadway.
Perhaps a more accurate way to answer that question would be to say that, with Route 66, I feel a sense of place. That is a comfortable fit for me. I suspect the same could be said, to some level, of most 66ers, be they tourists, wanderers, or dreamers. That is what makes the lure irresistible for so many and what makes the Route 66 community a family in the truest sense.
Highly recommended. Absolutely essential.
Joplin High School Lip Dub November 8, 2011
Posted by Ron Warnick in Music, People.1 comment so far
In light of what happened to their town less than six months ago, this video put together by students in Joplin, Mo., is life-affirming and even moving — especially the second part:
The video description:
This is the first Joplin High School Lip Dub. Since the May 22, 2011 tornado we have been wanting to do something special and fun for all of the Junior and Senior students at the 11/12 campus located at the Northpark Mall. Songs include “Let’s Get it Started” by the Black Eyed Peas and “Firework” by Katy Perry.
According to a story about the video by KOAM-TV:
Video Production students organized the effort, casting those who would lip sync and mapping out the shoot through the mall and new school.
Hollywood photographer, Simon Jays, used a steady cam to do the shooting. Jays works for HBO on the show “True Blood” and visited with the TV Production classes.
The video took two weeks to plan, three rehearsals and 1,000 students.
Shout! Factory acquires “Route 66″ television series November 7, 2011
Posted by Ron Warnick in Movies, Television.3 comments
Shout! Factory, a respected DVD issuer and music label, has acquired all the rights to the “Route 66″ television series of the early 1960s, reported the Hollywood Reporter.
The rights to “Route 66,” an Emmy-nominated and highly praised drama that co-starred Martin Milner and George Maharis, had been owned by Roxbury Entertainment since about 2000. (My interview with Maharis in 2007 can be read here.)

Roxbury released the first three seasons of “Route 66″ on DVD, but to date has not reissued the fourth and final season. Roxbury also issued a “Best of Route 66″ DVD of 11 episodes plucked from the series’ entire run.
The Reporter said:
Instead of simply licensing DVD rights to the hit 1960-64 TV show Route 66, it bought proprietary rights to the series, including all 116 original episodes, archived materials, worldwide home entertainment and digital rights and North American broadcast rights.
“As we are aggressively expanding our purchasing libraries of premiere television and films, this deal exemplifies the type of strategic acquisitions we plan to actively pursue,” said Shout! co-founders Richard Foos, Bob Emmer and Garson Foos in a joint statement. [...]
Roxbury Entertainment and producer Kirk Hallam, who have retained trademark and TV remake and film rights, are developing a Route 66 TV series remake with Shout! Factory.
Shout! Factory’s website also included this intriguing page, where “Route 66″ fans can sign up for emailed alerts about “a Route 66 project in the works.”
A news release from Shout! Factory (via TVShowsonDVD.com) also says this:
Shout! Factory plans a multi-tiered rollout of ROUTE 66on all packaged media, digital distribution via electronic-sell-through (EST), video-on-demand (VOD), subscription video-on-demand (SVOD), and North American broadcast, cable and syndication.
Even though the “Route 66″ program seldom ever shot on the Mother Road, it remains a major reason the real U.S. Highway 66 became such a major part of pop culture.
A couple of observations about this development:
— Shout! Factory acquiring rights to “Route 66″ is very good news indeed for fans of the program. Roxbury took some heat for a widescreen release of one reissue where the the top and bottom of the playback image was chopped. A few episodes also were criticized for subpar quality because the original film couldn’t be located at the time of remastering. Another DVD set also encountered playback problems. I’ve reviewed other Shout! Factory DVDs and music reissues over the years, and I hold utmost confidence that these quality issues won’t reoccur. And I also bet Shout! will include more extra features in the DVDs — a lack of them was another criticism of the Roxbury reissues.
— At one point, Roxbury president and CEO Kirk Hallam said his company was going to produce a feature film based on the “Route 66″ television show and be shot on the real Route 66. Release date was slated for 2009, but it never came to pass. I suspect the cratering of the economy in 2008 scuttled those plans. If anything, getting a network to pick up a TV show is every bit as tough as making a movie. We’ll see whether a television series actually comes to light.
“The Autumn of Route 66″ trailer November 7, 2011
Posted by Ron Warnick in Movies, Road trips.1 comment so far
Filmmaker Ester Brym has released a trailer for the documentary she’s been working on, titled “The Autumn of Route 66.”
The film’s website is here, although it’s still in a somewhat embryonic stage. No word on a release date for the film, although Brym was still editing it a couple of weeks ago.
A blast of steam from the past at Tucumcari November 6, 2011
Posted by Ron Warnick in Events, Preservation, Railroad.5 comments

The Route 66 town of Tucumcari, N.M., got a rare treat — the Union Pacific Railroad’s “Living Legend” No. 844 steam engine making a stop at during the dedication and reopening of its historic train depot.
Tucumcari was the first stop for the historic steam engine. The ongoing restoration of the depot is Tucumcari MainStreet’s first project in a long-term plan to restore downtown.
Richard Talley, reporting that hundreds attended the event, observed this:
There were fire artists, fire dancers, an old fashioned brass band and more, well into the night over there. A large Route 66 photography exhibit was on display in depot building itself, I believe about 100 large prints from all across Route 66. It was great fun, a once in a lifetime experience with the Centennial Celebration, and people with fond memories of the depot’s heyday, came from all over the state. Not only was the train significant in building Tucumcari from 1901, but the depot you see today, and now once again open for all to enjoy, was built in 1926 when Route 66 was commissioned. [...]
Rumor has it, this will now become an annual event, including having the Union Pacific come through each year!
The steam engine is making its way across New Mexico and Arizona, as both states are celebrating their centennials.
Here’s a great video of the steam engine, barreling toward Tucumcari from Logan, N.M. The 844 doesn’t just lumber along at a moderate speed:
Here’s a look inside the steam engine’s cab:
Here’s the train leaving Tucumcari:
UPDATE 11/9/2011: Here are two more videos that have popped up. Here’s the 844 steaming along Route 66 near Santa Rosa, N.M.:
And here’s the train near Tucumcari:
Both high-definition videos are by Dan Barker and Skip Weythman.
(Photo courtesy of Kevin Mueller)
Big quake brings little damage to Route 66 November 6, 2011
Posted by Ron Warnick in Weather.add a comment
Oklahoma experienced its most powerful earthquake in state history Saturday night, but a cursory inspection of the Mother Road in the affected region turned up no apparent damage.
The quake struck at 10:53 p.m. Saturday. According to revised figures by the U.S. Geological Society, it measured 5.6 on the Richter scale. The epicenter was near the small village of Sparks, about six miles south of the Route 66 town of Davenport.
The quake broke the previous state record of 5.5, set in 1952 in El Reno. A series of aftershocks followed through Sunday morning. A smaller earthquake (4.0 magnitude) also occurred early Saturday morning, but many people slept through it.
According to The Oklahoman newspaper, the Saturday night quake damaged a portion of U.S. 62 in Lincoln County. Several homes in that county saw collapsing chimneys or cracked foundations.
I cruised Route 66 from Tulsa to Luther on Sunday morning to see whether I could spot damage to historic buildings or structures, including on the obscure Ozark Trail alignments. Fortunately, everything seemed normal.
A clerk at a convenience store in Stroud said a few chimney collapses occurred in town, but most of the damage occurred in towns near the quake’s epicenter, such as Meeker and Prague. A volunteer at the Seaba Station Motorcycle Museum in the hamlet of Warwick said several items fell off the walls at the museum, but none of the memorabilia was damaged.
I experienced the earthquake shortly after shutting off the TV following the Oklahoma State-Kansas State football game. It initially felt like a big truck rumbling by on the street, but the vibration intensified dramatically after about five seconds. It then settled into a low vibration for another 20 seconds or so.
I really wasn’t frightened by the quake as I was fascinated. But quite a few Oklahomans I talked to were alarmed by the quake because they’re not used to such seismic activity.
“Born to Be Wild” November 6, 2011
Posted by Ron Warnick in Motorcycles, Movies, Music, Road trips.2 comments
I’ll let the creator of this video explain it:
Bobby Cochran & Steppenwolf perform an extended version of “Born To Be Wild” from the movie “Easy Rider” (1969) starring Peter Fonda, Dennis Hopper and Jack Nicholson. Location scenes include Park Moabi, California; Colorado River bridge crossing at Topock, Arizona; Flagstaff and other scenes along Route 66 in Northern Arizona. Also, Steppenwolf in a live performance on the “Midnight Special” TV show.
In case you’re wondering who Bobby Cochran is, he’s a guitarist for a later version of Steppenwolf. Regardless, it’s a fun clip.
Tattoo Man’s bad, he’s nationwide November 5, 2011
Posted by Ron Warnick in People, Television.1 comment so far
CNN and a bunch of other media outlets have picked up this video made by a Tulsa television station a few days ago.
It’s about Ron “Tattoo Man” Jones of Bartlesville, Okla., who has 103 tattoos on his body. All but one of those tattoos depict Route 66 landmarks.
http://youtu.be/MKbrCL-n2_Y
By the time you read this, he’ll probably have tattoo No. 104 already made.
Old gas station converted into art gallery November 5, 2011
Posted by Ron Warnick in Art, Businesses, Gas stations, Preservation.1 comment so far
A former Sinclair gas station that was built in 1923 in Cuba, Mo., has been converted into the Spirals Gallery & Studio, according to a story in the Cuba Free Press.
Merry Brewer Cloer and her husband Adam renovated the “ramshackle” Don’s Sinclair Station at 502 E. Washington Blvd. (aka Route 66). Spirals opened in mid-October.
“My dream was to have a bed and breakfast in some beautiful setting that would inspire me to paint or whatever. Adam wanted to build and restore classic cars,” she said. In August, Adam became the shop manager for Classic Autoworks in Rolla, and he calls it his dream job. Merry’s dream took a less direct route.
“Our house was overflowing with our projects, so I was trying to find a storage building,” she said. “We lived just a block from this dilapidated building, and I got to wondering about it. I tracked down the owner and asked to see it and agreed to buy it to use as a storage building. After Adam looked at it, he said that it would need a lot of structural work to make it useable, so we started to fix it up. Things have just ‘spiraled’ since then and been so much fun.” [...]
Although the building was pretty run down, there were a few unique aspects. On the sides of the building there is mother-of-pearl shell inlayed in the concrete. Inside, you will see the front wall of the station, with its mother-of- pearl inlay preserved. It was covered in grime and layers of paint. Now, it sparkles in the light. The original columns for the station still stand guard outside the front entrance.
Merry will sell her own works, plus offer space to local artists on a consignment basis. Adam says he plans to display and sell a few classic cars near the gallery, as a way to add to the Route 66 atmosphere.
The Spirals Gallery can be found on Facebook here, with plenty of photos. Merry also is asking for any information about the history of the Sinclair station.
A driver’s view of Oatman Road November 4, 2011
Posted by Ron Warnick in Motorcycles, Road trips.4 comments
Sit back and take a mini-vacation for 23 minutes. Here’s the best-quality video I’ve seen of a motorcyclist’s drive on Oatman Road, from the outskirts of Kingman, Ariz., through the twists and turns to Sitgreaves Pass, and into the town of Oatman itself. It was shot with a helmet cam.
You’ll see cattle near the road about the 11-minute mark. Strangely, no wild burros are seen in Oatman.