The New Mexico
Madonna of the Trail is one of a dozen monuments (one in each state on the
National Old Trails Road) commemorating the hardships of early
pioneer travellers. She stands on US 66 in Albuquerque. Albuquerque is also home to the 1927
Art Deco themed
KiMo Theater and the first modern suburban shopping mall in New Mexico,
Nob Hill.
Historic districts Fort Wingate, an abandoned military installation east of
Gallup, traces its history to attempts in the 19th century to forcibly displace
Navajo to native reservations. It later served as a line of defense against the
Apache. Closed in 1912, it reopened briefly to house prisoners during both world wars. The
Barelas-South Fourth Street Historic District is a collection of commercial buildings from various eras in a formerly Hispanic residential neighborhood in
Albuquerque. Eras represented include the arrival of the
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway and the later construction of US 66. The
Park Lake Historic District is a 25-acre municipal park on a lake in
Santa Rosa in addition to the natural Blue hole lake coming from the vast underground water system. Constructed under the
Works Progress Administration between 1934 and 1940, the park was a make-work project during the
Great Depression.
Restaurants The historic
Jones Motor Company building in Albuquerque, originally a motorcar dealership, was re-purposed to (formerly) house the local Kelly's Brew Pub, now home to the local Italian restaurant M'Tucci's Bar Roma.
Service and filling stations Richardson's Store in
Montoya, a 1901 railroad town, initially provided provisions for
Rock Island Railroad workers and
ranchers. When Route 66 came to town, the store carried groceries and auto supplies. It closed after I-40 bypassed the community.
Roy T. Herman's Garage and Service Station in
Thoreau was moved in 1937 from
Grants, where it had originally been established in 1935. The routing of Route 66 had moved, so the station moved with it to keep its Route 66 clientele.
Trading posts New Mexico is home to the Native American
Pueblo of Santo Domingo (Kewa Pueblo) in
Santo Domingo and the
Pueblo of Laguna in
Laguna. Roadside merchants on Route 66 often based their stores on the design of the early trading posts which originally served the native community. The De Anza Motor Lodge and the surrounding Nob Hill neighborhood served as a trading post for the Zuni Pueblo in Albuquerque.
Bowlin's Old Crater Trading Post, Bluewater has long been closed and vacant. Originally a native trading post, its proprietors established a modern chain of highway service centers. Albuquerque's 1939
Maisel's Indian Trading Post, which once employed hundreds of native craftspeople, was reopened in the 1980s and remains in operation today.
Camps, motor courts, and motels age illuminating the
Blue Swallow Motel in
Tucumcari Various towns and cities quickly established roadside
motel strips to accommodate a burgeoning traffic from Route 66 travelers.
Tucumcari had long advertised "2000 motel rooms" (later "1200 motel rooms" due to the construction of I-40, diminishing visitor population) on roadside signage for hundreds of miles along US 66 using the slogan "Tucumcari tonite!" At least one historically restored Tucumcari Boulevard motel, the 12-room, neon-lit, 1939
Blue Swallow Motel, is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. Another motel recently restored nearby is the Motel Safari. The Motel Safari was built in 1959 by Chester Dohrer and features a mid-century modern retro design with "Doo Wop" or "Googie" styled architecture. Boomerangs, holes in cinder blocks, counter stacked bricks protruding from the façade and whimsical metal cylinders that light up at night, along with its famous camel atop the neon sign, paying tribute to the U.S. Camel Corps that once came through the area in the 1800s on a surveying expedition for a future national road system. Central Avenue in Albuquerque has many motels from this era, although some (such as the
Aztec Motel) have been demolished along with other building to accommodate for modern needs. Historic Albuquerque lodgings from Route 66's heyday include the
Luna Lodge,
Tewa Motor Lodge,
De Anza Motor Lodge and
El Vado Auto Court. Some of these motels are currently closed but are the target of local efforts to ensure their historic preservation. In hopes to keep this era alive, some hotels including De Anza Motor Lodge and El Vado Motel have been rejuvenated along the historic route 66 in Albuquerque. The
El Rancho Hotel in Gallup has been the temporary home of many movie stars.
Bridges and road segments The
Rio Puerco Bridge, a Parker Through
truss bridge crossing the Rio Puerco, was built in 1933. Eleven New Mexico road segments on US 66 are listed on the
National Register of Historic Places; some originally incorporated wooden bridges to carry the road through flood plains. Listed road segments include: Glenrio to San Jon; San Jon to Tucumcari; Palomas to Montoya; Montoya to Cuervo; Cuervo to NM 156; Albuquerque to Rio Puerco; Laguna to McCartys; McCartys to Grants; Milan to Continental Divide; Iyanbito to Rehobeth; and Manuelito to the Arizona border. ==Related routes==