
Route 66 Turns 100 on November 11
November 11 is a historic day for two purposes, one international and one strictly American. In 1918, World War I fighting ended with an armistice at 11/11/11 — November 11 at 11 a.m. In 1926, historic Route 66 was commissioned in America on November 11, stretching from Chicago (Adams Street) to Santa Monica, California, at the pier. Route 66 was the famed escape route from the Dust Bowl in Oklahoma and Texas, which lasted a decade beginning in 1930. The highway was sadly decommissioned in 1986 in favor of freeways and interstates, but celebrations are being held along the route all year long. I asked my AI friend Gemini to recount the history of Route 66, and here it is: Established on November 11, 1926, U.S. Route 66—also known as the “Will Rogers Highway,” the “Main Street of America,” or the “Mother Road”—is one of the most famous highways in American history. Originally running a total of 2,448 miles, it connected Chicago, Illinois, through Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona, before ending at Santa Monica, California. Historical Evolution The Dust Bowl Migration: During the 1930s, the highway served as the primary route for hundreds of thousands of migratory
Route 66 Turns 100 on November 11
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