
How to Experience Route 66 in Oklahoma: The Complete Guide to America’s Longest and Most Authentic Mother Road State
When Route 66 travelers talk about the soul of the Mother Road, they usually end up talking about Oklahoma. No other state puts more original, drivable Route 66 mileage under your tires — more than 400 miles of it, stretching northeast to southwest from the Kansas border at Commerce to the Texas state line at Texola. No other state played a more central role in the highway’s creation. And no other state offers such a complete cross-section of everything Route 66 has been: a road of westward migration and Dust Bowl hardship, of mid-century road-trip optimism and neon-lit diners, of Native American heritage and oil-boom energy, of small-town America at its most authentic and unhurried.
Oklahoma is the home state of Cyrus Avery — the Tulsa businessman and highway commissioner widely known as the “Father of Route 66” — who fought successfully to route the new national highway diagonally through his state rather than along a more direct path. That decision gave Oklahoma the longest corridor of any Route 66 state and shaped the entire character of the Mother Road. From the rolling Osage Hills of the northeast to the open wheat-field prairies of the west, driving Route 66 through Oklahoma means driving through the country that made the highway what it is.
This guide covers the full Oklahoma corridor from northeast to southwest: the major towns and cities, the essential stops and landmarks, the museums, the famous gas stations and diners, the roadside giants, and the planning information you need for a road trip through the Sooner State. It also serves as a hub page linking to every detailed stop-level guide already on route66travelinfo.com for Oklahoma’s Mother Road.
Oklahoma Route 66 at a Glance
| Oklahoma Route 66 — Quick Reference | |
| Total Distance | Approx. 400+ miles — most drivable original Route 66 of any state |
| Entry Point (from Kansas) | Commerce, OK — entering south on US-69 from Baxter Springs, KS |
| Exit Point (into Texas) | Texola, OK — continuing west on I-40 / old US-66 into the Texas Panhandle |
| Direction | Northeast to southwest — longest diagonal of any Route 66 state |
| Major Cities | Commerce • Miami • Claremore • Tulsa • Sapulpa • Stroud • Chandler • Oklahoma City • Arcadia • Edmond • Weatherford • Clinton • Elk City • Sayre • Erick • Texola |
| Drive Time (straight through) | Approx. 6–7 hours non-stop; allow 3–5 days to stop properly |
| Best Season | April–June and September–October; summer is hot but full of events |
| Essential Stops | Blue Whale of Catoosa, Pops 66 Soda Ranch Arcadia, Round Barn Arcadia, Lucille’s Historic Gas Station Hydro, Oklahoma Route 66 Museum Clinton, National Route 66 Museum Elk City, Milk Bottle Grocery OKC, Will Rogers Memorial Claremore |
| Preceding State | Route 66 in Kansas — 13.2 miles from Galena through Baxter Springs |
| Following State | Route 66 in Texas — ~178 miles through the Texas Panhandle to Amarillo |
The History of Route 66 in Oklahoma: Where the Mother Road Was Born
Oklahoma’s connection to Route 66 begins before the highway itself. In the 1920s, Cyrus Avery, a Tulsa oil businessman and member of the American Association of State Highway Officials, became the driving force behind the creation of a national highway linking Chicago to Los Angeles. Avery lobbied successfully for the highway to follow a diagonal path — rather than a more direct western route — that would pass through his home state, through Springfield, Missouri, and through the communities he knew. The result was Route 66, officially commissioned on November 11, 1926.
Oklahoma’s Route 66 took on its deepest historical resonance during the Dust Bowl years of the 1930s. When drought and economic catastrophe devastated the Oklahoma and Texas panhandle farmlands, hundreds of thousands of families packed everything they owned and headed west on Route 66 in search of survival and a new life in California. John Steinbeck documented this migration in The Grapes of Wrath, calling Route 66 the “Mother Road” — the road of flight and of hope. The imagery of Oklahomans on Route 66, of overloaded cars heading into the setting sun, is embedded deeply in the American cultural memory. Driving through towns like Erick, Sayre, and Texola today, you can still feel the weight of that story in the landscape.
The postwar era brought a very different kind of Route 66 traffic to Oklahoma: leisure travelers headed to California for vacation, families in station wagons, and the full mid-century roadside economy of diners, motels, and tourist attractions. Oklahoma responded with neon-lit motor courts, drive-ins, and roadside oddities that are now among the most celebrated stops on the Mother Road. The Blue Whale of Catoosa, the Round Barn at Arcadia, and Lucille Hamons’ legendary gas station at Hydro all belong to this era of Route 66 as a celebration of American mobility.
Interstate 40 bypassed much of Route 66 through Oklahoma between the 1960s and the highway’s official decommissioning in 1985. But Oklahoma’s preserved Route 66 corridor is exceptional in length and quality. The Oklahoma Route 66 Association, organized in 1989, has been a national leader in preservation and promotion. Today, travelers can drive more original Route 66 alignment in Oklahoma than in any other state — a fact that makes this the crown jewel of any full-route road trip.
Northeast Oklahoma Route 66: Commerce, Miami, Claremore, and the Approach to Tulsa
Commerce and Miami: The First Oklahoma Towns
Route 66 enters Oklahoma from Kansas and immediately passes through Commerce — a small mining town whose most famous former resident is Mickey Mantle, the baseball Hall of Famer who grew up here. A historic marker and photo opportunity at the boyhood home pay tribute to one of the most celebrated athletes in American history. From Commerce, Route 66 continues through Miami (pronounced “My-AM-uh” by locals), a charming small city whose Route 66 legacy is most visible in the beautifully restored Coleman Theatre Beautiful, a 1929 Spanish Mission Revival movie palace that is one of the finest historic theaters on the entire Mother Road.
Claremore: Will Rogers Country
Between Miami and Tulsa, Claremore is the essential stop — the hometown of Will Rogers, America’s most beloved humorist, cowboy philosopher, and cultural ambassador of the 1920s and 1930s. The Will Rogers Memorial Museum at 1720 W. Will Rogers Blvd. is one of the finest small museums in Oklahoma, with nine galleries covering Rogers’s extraordinary life from his Cherokee heritage to his Hollywood career, his nationwide radio broadcasts, and his death in the 1935 Alaska plane crash. Claremore is also home to the J.M. Davis Arms and Historical Museum and the Blue Dome District. Route 66 travelers who know their mid-century road history will also recognize Claremore as the home of Cyrus Avery’s original advocacy work: it was in this region that the case for Route 66’s diagonal Oklahoma path was first made.
Catoosa: The Blue Whale
Just northeast of Tulsa, the small community of Catoosa is home to the most cheerfully improbable stop on Oklahoma’s Route 66: the Blue Whale of Catoosa. This 80-foot smiling fiberglass whale sits beside a small pond along Highway 66, built in the early 1970s by zoologist Hugh Davis as a gift for his wife Zelta, who collected whale figurines. What began as a private gesture became one of the most photographed landmarks on the Mother Road.
The Blue Whale is free to visit, open year-round, and surrounded by picnic grounds and walking paths. Visitors can walk through the whale’s body, stand on the dock, and take photographs from every angle. It is the perfect emblem of Route 66’s spirit: purely personal, thoroughly impractical, and completely irresistible. The full stop guide is at route66travelinfo.com/blue-whale-of-catoosa.
| Blue Whale of Catoosa — Quick Facts | |
| Address | 2680 Oklahoma 66, Catoosa, OK 74015 |
| Admission | Free |
| Hours | Open year-round — dawn to dusk |
| Time to Allow | 30–45 minutes |
| Full Guide | Blue Whale of Catoosa on route66travelinfo.com |
Tulsa: Oklahoma’s Route 66 Metropolis
After Catoosa, Route 66 enters Tulsa — Oklahoma’s second-largest city and a Route 66 destination in its own right. Route 66 through Tulsa follows 11th Street through the heart of the city, one of the best-preserved Route 66 urban corridors in the entire state. The street is lined with original neon motel signs, vintage commercial architecture, and restored landmarks that make a slow drive worth every minute.
Tulsa’s Route 66 highlights include the Meadow Gold Sign at 1324 E. 11th St. — a restored 1930s neon sign that is one of the most photographed on the corridor — the Blue Dome Building at 2nd and Elgin Ave., a distinctive 1920s gasoline station, and the Route 66 Historical Village at 3770 Southwest Boulevard, an open-air museum anchored by a 194-foot-tall oil derrick at the site of Tulsa’s first oil strike. The city’s Cyrus Avery Centennial Plaza on the west bank of the Arkansas River is perhaps the most powerful Route 66 landmark in Oklahoma: a sweeping sculpture of a horse-drawn wagon meeting an early automobile, marking the exact historic crossing point of the Mother Road over the Arkansas River.
Tulsa rewards at least a full day of Route 66 exploration. The Tulsa Oklahoma Route 66 Travel Guide on route66travelinfo.com covers the complete Tulsa corridor with addresses, visiting hours, and insider tips for every major stop.
Sapulpa: The Heart of Route 66 Auto History
Southwest of Tulsa, Sapulpa bills itself as the “Crossroads of America” and backs that claim with a rich Route 66 heritage. The town is home to the Heart of Route 66 Auto Museum and a collection of restored service stations and historic buildings that make it a rewarding half-day stop. The Frankoma Pottery and several mid-century commercial buildings along the original alignment give Sapulpa an authentic, working-town atmosphere that distinguishes it from more tourist-focused Route 66 communities.
The Sapulpa Oklahoma Route 66 Travel Guide on route66travelinfo.com covers the complete Sapulpa corridor in detail.
Stroud and Chandler: Diners, Museums, and the Open Oklahoma Prairie
Stroud: The Rock Café
The small town of Stroud is famous among Route 66 enthusiasts for the Rock Café at 114 W. Main Street — a beloved 1939 stone diner that has been serving travelers since the Depression era. The Rock Café is said to have inspired the character Sally Carrera in the 2006 Pixar film Cars, adding a pop culture layer to its already considerable Route 66 heritage. The original building survived a significant fire in 2008 and was painstakingly rebuilt, reopening to widespread acclaim. A stop here for a meal is one of the quintessential Oklahoma Route 66 diner experiences.
Chandler: The Route 66 Interpretive Center
In Chandler, the Route 66 Interpretive Center occupies a beautifully restored 1930s Conoco station and provides an engaging and well-curated introduction to the history of the highway. The center is free to enter and serves as both a visitor information point and a museum, with exhibits covering the full history of Route 66 through Oklahoma. Chandler’s Lincoln Motel — a classic 1939 motor court — is one of the best-preserved overnight lodging options on the Oklahoma corridor for travelers seeking an authentic mid-century experience.
Oklahoma City and the Arcadia Corridor: The Oklahoma Route 66 Heartland
The Oklahoma City metropolitan area is the richest concentration of Route 66 heritage in the state, with a dense cluster of landmarks stretching from the northeast suburbs through downtown and into the western suburbs. This is also where Pops 66 Soda Ranch and the Round Barn at Arcadia — two of the most visited Route 66 stops in Oklahoma — sit within a few miles of each other, making the Arcadia area an unmissable two-stop combination.
Pops 66 Soda Ranch, Arcadia
The most visually arresting stop in the Oklahoma City area is Pops 66 Soda Ranch in Arcadia, where a 66-foot-tall LED-illuminated soda bottle sculpture commands the flat Oklahoma landscape for miles in every direction. Pops opened in 2007 as the vision of oil magnate Aubrey McClendon, with prize-winning architecture by Elliott + Associates of Oklahoma City. Inside the floor-to-ceiling glass building, more than 700 varieties of bottled soda are arranged by color across the walls, creating a retail display that is also a work of environmental art. A full-service diner serves milkshakes, burgers, and chicken fried steak.
Pops is one of the few genuinely new Route 66 landmarks — not preserved from the past but purpose-built in the 21st century — and it captures the spirit of the Mother Road’s roadside spectacle tradition as authentically as anything built in the highway’s mid-century heyday. The full dedicated guide is at route66travelinfo.com/pops-66-soda-ranch-arcadia-oklahoma-route-66/.
The Famous Round Barn, Arcadia
Less than a mile east of Pops, the Famous Round Barn is one of the most distinctive architectural stops on the entire length of Route 66. Built in 1898 by farmer William Harrison Odor using bur oak boards soaked and bent into curves while still green, the barn is the only round barn on Route 66 and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
The ground floor houses a gift shop full of Round Barn and Route 66 souvenirs; the upper loft — where the curved wood creates extraordinary acoustics — is the architectural highlight. Together, Pops and the Round Barn form one of the best two-stop combinations on Oklahoma’s Route 66: a 21st-century spectacle and a 19th-century masterpiece, separated by less than a mile of the Mother Road. The complete guide is at route66travelinfo.com/famous-round-barn-on-route-66/.
Oklahoma City: History, Neon, and the Milk Bottle Grocery
Route 66 passes through the heart of Oklahoma City along a corridor rich with mid-century landmarks. The Milk Bottle Grocery at 2426 N. Classen Blvd. is the most-photographed building in the city: a tiny triangular 1930 brick structure topped with a giant metal milk bottle, originally an advertisement for local dairy products and now one of Route 66’s most beloved quirky icons.
Beyond the Milk Bottle, Oklahoma City’s Route 66 corridor includes the Tower Theatre (a restored 1937 Art Deco movie palace at 425 NW 23rd St.), the Will Rogers Theatre (a 1946 Art Moderne cinema at 4322 N. Western Ave.), the Gold Dome (a stunning 1958 geodesic dome building), and the Lake Overholser Bridge — a historic Route 66 crossing on the city’s west side. The Oklahoma City National Memorial just off the corridor adds a profound historical dimension for any traveler willing to leave the highway for an hour.
The complete Oklahoma City Route 66 Travel Guide covers every major landmark, district, and dining recommendation for the OKC corridor.
Western Oklahoma Route 66: Hydro, Weatherford, Clinton, Elk City, and the Long Haul to Texas
Hydro: Lucille’s Historic Highway Gas Station
West of Oklahoma City, the corridor passes through Hydro — home to one of the most evocative stops on the entire route. Lucille’s Historic Highway Gas Station is a 1929 house-over-station design that was operated for more than five decades by Lucille Hamons, a woman who kept her station open long after Interstate 40 bypassed Hydro and the traffic disappeared. She was known as the “Mother of the Mother Road” for her hospitality to stranded travelers, her generosity during hard times, and her refusal to let Route 66 die on her watch. Added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1997, the station stands as a preserved monument to the human spirit of Route 66.
The full story of Lucille and her station is told in the Lucille’s Historic Gas Station guide on route66travelinfo.com. The Hydro, Oklahoma Route 66 Travel Guide covers the full town visit.
Weatherford: Aviation Heritage and Lucille’s Roadhouse
Just west of Hydro, Weatherford offers one of the best cultural detours on the Oklahoma corridor. The Stafford Air & Space Museum at 3000 Logan Road celebrates the life and career of Thomas P. Stafford, the Weatherford native and astronaut who flew on Gemini, Apollo, and the Apollo-Soyuz missions. The museum is one of the finest aviation heritage sites in the southern Great Plains and a surprisingly rich stop for Route 66 travelers. The Lucille’s Roadhouse near Weatherford is a modern tribute diner to the original Lucille Hamons station, serving classic American fare in a Route 66-themed environment.
The Weatherford Oklahoma Route 66 Travel Guide covers the full stop in detail.
Clinton: The Oklahoma Route 66 Museum
In Clinton, one of western Oklahoma’s most important Route 66 cities, stands the Oklahoma Route 66 Museum — widely regarded as one of the finest and most immersive Route 66 museums anywhere on the corridor. Operated by the Oklahoma Historical Society and opened in 1995, the museum delivers a decade-by-decade journey through Route 66’s full history, with recreated environments, authentic artifacts, period music and sound design, and exhibits that bring every era of the Mother Road vividly to life.
The museum’s 1930s Dust Bowl room is particularly powerful, surrounding visitors with the sights and sounds of the Great Depression-era migration that defined Route 66’s deepest identity. Allow a minimum of 90 minutes here — serious Route 66 enthusiasts will want two hours or more. The museum is essential for any first-time driver of the Oklahoma corridor. The complete visiting guide is at route66travelinfo.com/oklahoma-route-66-museum-clinton-oklahoma/.
| Oklahoma Route 66 Museum — Quick Facts | |
| Address | 2229 W. Gary Blvd., Clinton, OK 73601 |
| Hours | Open daily (check for current hours; closed major holidays) |
| Admission | Affordable; seniors, children, and group rates available |
| Time to Allow | 90 minutes minimum; 2+ hours recommended |
| Full Guide | Oklahoma Route 66 Museum guide on route66travelinfo.com |
Elk City: The National Route 66 Museum
Further west, Elk City is home to the National Route 66 Museum — a sprawling complex that includes a pioneer town, a farm and ranch museum, a transportation museum, and a dedicated Route 66 exhibit hall. The National Route 66 Museum takes a broader view of the highway than the Clinton museum, placing it within the full sweep of western American history from pioneer settlement through the automobile age. Together, the two museums form a compelling double feature for any traveler spending two or more days in western Oklahoma.
Sayre, Erick, and the Final Run to Texas
The final stretch of Oklahoma Route 66, from Elk City through Sayre, Erick, and out to the Texas state line at Texola, is some of the most evocative driving on the entire corridor. The landscape opens to wide western Oklahoma prairie, the towns grow smaller and quieter, and the original Route 66 alignment is frequently visible running parallel to or diverging from the modern highway.
Sayre’s Beckham County Courthouse — a stunning 1911 Romanesque Revival structure — is one of the finest historic courthouses in Oklahoma and worth a stop. Erick, nicknamed “the ‘66 Capital of Oklahoma,”” has a remarkably intact historic commercial district with multiple original Route 66-era buildings in close proximity. The 100th Meridian Museum in Erick celebrates the town’s place on the dividing line between the humid East and the arid West. And the near-ghost town of Texola, just inside the Oklahoma border, offers one of the most atmospheric and melancholy Route 66 photo opportunities in the entire state: a cluster of abandoned buildings and overgrown lots at the edge of the Oklahoma plain, a last-exhale reminder of everything the interstate bypassed.
How to Drive Route 66 Through Oklahoma: Pacing and Itinerary Suggestions
Oklahoma’s 400+ miles require thoughtful pacing. Here are suggested approaches by available time.
| Days Available | Recommended Approach |
| 1 Day (Express) | Catoosa Blue Whale (30 min) → Tulsa 11th Street drive-through (45 min) → Chandler Interpretive Center (45 min) → Arcadia: Pops + Round Barn (90 min) → Oklahoma City Milk Bottle Grocery photo stop (20 min) → Hydro Lucille’s photo stop (20 min) → Clinton Oklahoma Route 66 Museum (90 min). Long day; covers the absolute essentials. |
| 2 Days | Day 1: Commerce → Claremore Will Rogers Museum → Catoosa Blue Whale → Tulsa full day (11th St., Cyrus Avery Plaza, Blue Dome, Meadow Gold Sign). Day 2: Sapulpa → Stroud Rock Café lunch → Chandler → Arcadia Pops + Round Barn → Oklahoma City Milk Bottle + Tower Theatre → Hydro Lucille’s. |
| 3 Days (Recommended) | Day 1: Commerce through Tulsa. Day 2: Sapulpa through Oklahoma City and Arcadia. Day 3: Hydro, Weatherford, Clinton Museum, Elk City National Museum, Sayre, Erick, Texola. Allows proper time at all major stops without rushing. |
| 4–5 Days (Full Immersion) | Add overnight stays in Tulsa and Oklahoma City. Detour to the OKC National Memorial. Spend a morning on the Erick historic district. Drive every section of original concrete roadbed. Visit the Sapulpa, Chandler, and Stroud stops fully. Time the Pops 66 visit for after dark to see the LED soda bottle light show. |
Best Time to Drive Route 66 in Oklahoma
Oklahoma’s climate is highly varied across its 400-mile east-west corridor. Here is a season-by-season breakdown.
| Season | What to Expect |
| Spring (Apr–May) | Best overall season. Temperatures in the 65–80°F range, wildflowers on the prairie, vivid green Oklahoma landscape. Be weather-aware: Oklahoma is in Tornado Alley and severe thunderstorm season peaks in May. Check forecasts daily. Stunning light for photography. |
| Summer (Jun–Aug) | Hot (90–105°F), humid in the east, dry in the west. All attractions fully open; busiest season for Route 66 road trips, especially in the 2026 Centennial year. Start days early to beat the heat. Evening visits to Pops 66 are particularly rewarding — the LED soda bottle puts on its best show after dark. |
| Fall (Sep–Oct) | Second-best season. Temperatures drop to the 65–80°F range, harvest light is extraordinary on the western Oklahoma prairie, crowds thin dramatically after Labor Day. October is ideal: cool, clear, golden, and peaceful. The corridor’s Route 66 festivals cluster in September and October. |
| Winter (Nov–Mar) | Cold (highs in the 40–55°F range), occasional ice storms in the east. Some roadside businesses reduce hours. The landscape takes on a stark, minimalist quality that appeals to certain photographers. Not recommended for a first-time Oklahoma Route 66 drive. |
Oklahoma Route 66 and the 2026 Centennial
The Route 66 Centennial — 100 years since November 11, 1926 — is a moment Oklahoma is celebrating with particular energy and pride. As the home state of Cyrus Avery, the Father of Route 66, and as the state with more original drivable mileage than any other, Oklahoma has an unmatched claim on the Centennial’s meaning. Events, festivals, car shows, and commemorative programming are planned at stops along the full 400-mile corridor throughout 2026.
For travelers planning their first full-route Route 66 drive in the Centennial year, Oklahoma deserves more time than any other state. The combination of its mileage, its history, its landmarks, and its Centennial energy makes a 3-to-5-day Oklahoma segment the centerpiece of any Chicago-to-Santa-Monica journey in 2026.
The Route 66 complete travel guide on route66travelinfo.com covers Centennial planning resources and context for the full eight-state drive.
Oklahoma Route 66 Hub: All Stop Guides on route66travelinfo.com
This page serves as the hub for all Oklahoma Route 66 content on route66travelinfo.com. As new stop-level guides are published, they will be linked here. The following guides are currently live.
Blue Whale of Catoosa — Complete guide to Oklahoma’s most beloved free roadside attraction — the 80-foot smiling fiberglass whale near Tulsa.
Tulsa Oklahoma Route 66 Travel Guide — Full coverage of Route 66 through Tulsa: 11th Street, Meadow Gold Sign, Blue Dome, Cyrus Avery Plaza, and more.
Sapulpa Oklahoma Route 66 Travel Guide — Complete guide to Sapulpa’s Route 66 corridor, the Heart of Route 66 Auto Museum, and historic service stations.
Pops 66 Soda Ranch — Arcadia, Oklahoma — The complete guide to Pops 66: the 66-foot LED soda bottle, 700+ soda varieties, the diner, and the award-winning architecture.
Famous Round Barn on Route 66 — Arcadia — The 1898 National Register landmark — the only round barn on Route 66, built with hand-bent bur oak.
Exploring the Round Barn in Arcadia, Oklahoma — A detailed exploration guide to the Round Barn, its history, architecture, and what to expect on your visit.
Oklahoma City on Route 66 — Complete guide to OKC’s Route 66 corridor: Tower Theatre, Will Rogers Theatre, Gold Dome, Lake Overholser Bridge, and more.
Milk Bottle Grocery — Oklahoma City — The history and visiting guide for OKC’s most iconic quirky landmark: the tiny triangular building with a giant milk bottle on the roof.
Lucille’s Historic Gas Station — Hydro, Oklahoma — The full story of Lucille Hamons, the “Mother of the Mother Road,” and her 1929 house-over-station on the Route 66 alignment.
Hydro, Oklahoma Route 66 Travel Guide — Complete guide to Hydro: Lucille’s station, Lucille’s Roadhouse nearby, and the surrounding western Oklahoma corridor.
Weatherford Oklahoma Route 66 Travel Guide — Full guide to Weatherford: the Stafford Air & Space Museum, Lucille’s Roadhouse, and Route 66 through western Oklahoma.
Oklahoma Route 66 Museum — Clinton, Oklahoma — Complete visiting guide to Oklahoma’s premier Route 66 museum: the decade-by-decade journey through the Mother Road’s full history.
More Route 66 Travel Resources
Route 66 Complete Travel Guide — The full 2,448-mile overview: every state, all must-see stops, planning tips, and 2026 Centennial information.
Route 66 in Kansas — The 13-mile Kansas segment from Galena through Baxter Springs — the state immediately preceding Oklahoma.
Route 66 in Texas — The Texas Panhandle segment — Amarillo, Cadillac Ranch, and the wide open plains west of Oklahoma.
Route 66 in Missouri — The 317-mile Missouri corridor — St. Louis, Cuba, Lebanon, Springfield, and the approach to Kansas.
Route 66 Associations — Directory of all state Route 66 associations including the Oklahoma Route 66 Association — the best on-the-ground resource for current Oklahoma corridor information.
Savoring the Journey: Dining and Lodging Along Route 66 — A full guide to the best diners, motor courts, and vintage motels across all eight states of the Mother Road.















