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The car is the cornerstone of modern American life; yet cars need roads, and so the road too is a cornerstone. But while cars have regularly been raised to the status of cult objects in song, poetry and film, roads have tended to keep a more prosaic image. Occasionally there have been exceptions: Bob Dylan named one of his most famous albums for a road — Highway 61 Revisited — and Jack Kerouac gave pride of place to a highway in his classic novel On the Road. Yet in the culture and history of twentieth century America, one highway stands out from the rest; and although it no longer exists, except in small sections here and there, "Route 66" is without the shadow of a doubt the most famous highway in the United States of America.
Today, little is left of the most famous of all America's highways. Here
and there, in Illinois or in Kentucky, sections of the famous road still
display the sign 66; but 66, where it does survive, is no longer a key
element in a continental highway system as it once was — just a local highway
linking neighboring towns. The development of the America's transcontinental
system of divided-highway "interstates" during the 1950's and 1960's meant
that the Mother Road rapidly became obsolete, and in 1977, fifty-one
years after it was created, U.S. 66 officially ceased to exist. By then,
almost everyone wanting to "motor west" was using the main east-west interstates,
I-40, I-60 or I-80
When,
bit by bit, 4-lane interstates replaced the old highway, business collapsed
very rapidly for many of those who had helped so many travelers on their
way. In agricultural regions, towns and communities could survive without
the road, but in the sparsely-populated desert areas, many small communities
just disappeared. Today, for instance, nothing but a solitary palm tree
and a wooden signboard marks the site of the one-time Bagdad, California.
Elsewhere, empty roofless stone buildings that were once garages or hotels
stand abandoned to the wind and the elements. On some sections of the old
road, cars pass by at the rate of one an hour or less
Perhaps in coming years, there may be a few more; the story of Route 66 is coming to be recognized as history, and a few adventurous travellers are driving along sections of it, reliving the spirit of the past; yet few, very few, travel the whole road, or what is left of it. Even in a 2001 air-conditioned Cadillac, Route 66 remains what Woody Guthrie called "a mighty hard road."
WORDS
cult
object: object that is treated with almost religious respect -
prosaic: banal - succulent: juicy - bevy:
collection - federal: national - network: system
- gravel: sand and stones - sustenance: food
and drink.
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Linguapress.com 2001 This text is a free resource
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copyright holder.