Serving Clovis, Portales and the Surrounding Communities
If you’re not aware of it yet, you will be soon. Route 66 is turning 100 in 2026.
Last month, a New Mexico committee called the Route 66 Centennial Coordination Group held a public meeting in Santa Rosa — one of more than a dozen communities across New Mexico that either grew up or grew more prosperous with the highway that was officially designated as a national highway in 1926.
Officials gathered to brainstorm ideas for celebrating the centennial anniversary with attractions and festivities worthy of “the kicks” people used to get on Route 66.
The committee, chaired by Bill Lee of Gallup, is seeking input and enthusiasm before moving into specific plans to exploit the anniversary with as much pomp and ceremony as the market will bear. After all, this isn’t just nostalgia we’re conjuring up here, it’s money.
The committee held its first meeting in Tucumcari in February. The next meeting is scheduled June 25 in Albuquerque, followed by meetings in Santa Fe and Gallup in the latter half of this year. Then we’ll start seeing the festivities coming into fruition and Route 66 will be touted from where it enters our state at Glenrio just west of the Texas border to Gallup a few miles east of the Arizona state line.
Old timers remember the heyday of Route 66, when dozens of gas stations, motels, cafés and restaurants came to live to serve the flow of traffic. Now, Interstate 40 serves essentially the same purpose, but the old timers will tell you it’s not the same.
It is interesting the paths that have helped to define us. After the West was taken from the Natives, and before Mexico ceded this region to the U.S., the Sante Fe Trail brought Anglos, Jews and many other migrants into the area. Then came the railroads and the Wild West was tamed.
Then came Route 66. It ran from Chicago to Santa Monica, Calif. — 2,448 miles across a growing nation. “Get your kicks on Route 66” became a popular saying in those days, but that wasn’t the half of it. Many who traveled this highway were looking for a better future, with their sights set on the “promised land” of California while passing through the wildlands of New Mexico.
That’s one reason California is the most populated state in our nation. But I’m certain some of those Route 66 western migrants never made it, instead settling down somewhere along the way.
My own grandparents went West in the 1920s, looking for something better than their poor and dusty home in Arkansas. They settled for a time in Arizona and were doing well, but after they gave birth to my mother and lost their young son to a sudden illness, they drove back home to Arkansas — a testament more to the strength of family ties than to the opportunities out West during those times.
I hope that as New Mexico prepares to celebrate “the Mother Road” as it’s traversed across the state, we’ll remember to record as much of its historic significance, on communities and families, as we can.
Tom McDonald is editor of the New Mexico Community News Exchange. Contact him at: