Celebrating 100 Years of the Mother Road: Route 66
Well if you ever plan to motor west
Just take my way it’s the highway that’s the best
Get your kicks on Route 66
What comes to mind when you think of America’s highways? Road trips, vacation, travel, cars, and open roads? Motels and diners, cafes and gas stations, roadside shops filled with colorful tchotchkes. In the popular imagination, the desert and the great American West evoke freedom and hope – hope for a better life and future where hard work pays off, leading to the attainment of peace and stability.
It can be argued that no highway has inspired more mythology in literature, film, and music than U.S. Highway 66, aka Route 66. Dubbed the “Mother Road” by John Steinbeck in The Grapes of Wrath, Route 66 once stretched 2,448 miles across eight states, starting in Chicago, Illinois, and ending in Santa Monica, California. While the highway will turn 100 years old on November 11, 2026, celebrations are beginning in April, when the road officially got its name on April 30, 1926.

This exhibition joins those centennial celebrations by showcasing materials related to Route 66 from the library’s Archives and Special Collections. The exhibit cases are divided into two sections: Nostalgia and Complicating Nostalgia. In Nostalgia, explore a brief timeline tracing the establishment and decommissioning of Route 66, along with examples of the kinds of notes motorists could record in guidebooks, and recommendations for diners and restaurants on Route 66 in California. In Complicating Nostalgia, encounter a more complex history of the Mother Road by examining the experiences of migrant farm workers and the challenges faced by Black motorists traveling Route 66 before the Civil Rights Act of 1964.




Visit the exhibit at Shields Library
From April 10, 2026 – August 19, 2026 come view the exhibition at Shields.
