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NEW MEXICO US
66 - AKA ROUTE 66 |
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New Mexico US
66
Price:
$4.00
Size: 4" x 4"
Code: NM-US66
IN STOCK,
SHIP NEXT OR SAME DAY!
For
other colors and sizes please contact us.
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About the sticker: |
U.S. Route 66
in New Mexico The historic U.S. Route 66 (US 66,
Route 66) ran east–west across the central part
of the state of New Mexico, along the path now
taken by Interstate 40 (I-40). However, until
1937, it took a longer route via Los Lunas,
Albuquerque, and Santa Fe, now roughly New
Mexico State Road 6 (NM 6), I-25, and US 84.
Large portions of the old road parallel to I-40
have been designated NM 118, NM 122, NM 124, NM
333, three separate loops of I-40 Business, and
state-maintained frontage roads.
It is
one of the roads on the Trails of the Ancients
Byway, one of the designated New Mexico Scenic
Byways
History
Route 66 in New Mexico was marked over portions
of two auto trails — the National Old Trails
Road from Arizona via Albuquerque and Santa Fe
to just shy of Las Vegas, and one of the main
routes of the Ozark Trails network from that
point into Texas.[3] The state had taken over
maintenance of these roads under several
numbers: NM 6 from Arizona to Los Lunas, part of
NM 1 through Albuquerque and Santa Fe to near
Las Vegas, NM 56 to Santa Rosa, the short NM 104
to Cuervo, and part of NM 3 to Texas. While NM
56 and NM 104 were completely absorbed by US 66,
NM 6 was reassigned to a route splitting from US
66 (old NM 6) at Laguna and heading straight
east through Albuquerque, Moriarty, and Palma to
US 66 at Santa Rosa. Except between Albuquerque
and Moriarty, where it formed part of US 470,
this was an unimproved road.[4][5][6]
New Mexico
had long been controlled politically by the
Santa Fe Ring, a group of businesspeople and
officials with close ties to the Republican
Party. In 1924, Democrat Arthur Thomas Hannett
was unexpectedly elected for a single term
(1925–1927) as governor, only to be defeated
with various dirty tricks in the next election.
Blaming the Republican establishment in Santa Fe
for his defeat, Hannett used the lame duck
remainder of his term to force through a
sixty-nine mile cutoff from Santa Rosa directly
to Albuquerque, bypassing Santa Fe entirely. The
hastily constructed new road opened January 3,
1927, while incoming governor Richard Dillon was
still trying to get construction stopped.[7]
Dillon was replaced by Arthur Seligman, a
Democrat, in 1931.
This new
NM 6 was approved as a future realignment of
Route 66 by 1932, and in 1933, a new bridge over
the Rio Puerco opened. Once paving was completed
in 1937, with AASHO approval given on September
26, 1937,[8] Route 66 was moved to this shorter
route, known as the Laguna Cut-off west of
Albuquerque and the Santa Rosa Cut-off east of
Albuquerque.[9] The bypassed roads became NM 6
once again to the west and part of US 84 to the
east. |
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