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Authors: Jim Hinckley

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INTRODUCTION

I
CONIC
R
OUTE
66
is more than a mere highway that connects a metropolis on the shore of Lake Michigan with a metropolis on the Pacific coast. It is the stuff of dreams. It is an icon of epic proportions that lures travelers from throughout the world to come experience American life as it once was and to seek the roadside ghosts from an era when Studebakers still rolled from the factory in South Bend.

The old highway is more than a 2,291-mile (according to a 1936 map) ribbon of asphalt lined with dusty remnants, ghostly vestiges, and polished gems manifesting more than eighty years of American societal evolution. Along Route 66, from Chicago to the shores of the Pacific Ocean at Santa Monica in California, whispering breezes carry the voices of ghosts from the Civil War that blend with those of French explorers, Native Americans, Spanish conquistadors, and pioneers fulfilling a young nation's Manifest Destiny.

To drive Route 66 is to follow the path of a new nation on its journey of westward expansion. The signs bearing the double six mark the path of an American highway that is but a modern incarnation of the Pontiac Trail, the Osage Trail, and the old Federal Wire Road; the Beale Wagon Road and the El Camino Real; the National Old Trails Highway; and the Santa Fe Trail.

This long and colorful history makes the ghost towns along Route 66 unique because they are ghosts of the modern era with roots that reach to the nation's earliest history.

There are territorial-era mining towns where men who came West on horseback cheered Barney Oldfield and Louis Chevrolet as they roared through town. There are quiet farming villages that once played center stage in the bloody conflict of the Civil War and dusty, wide spots in the road where centuries-old churches cast shadows over the ruts of the Santa Fe Trail as well as the broken asphalt of Route 66.

In the ghost towns of Route 66, the old road will forever be America's Main Street. In the empty places along America's most famous highway, the ghosts whisper on every breeze, and the swirling sands of time blur the line between past and present.

ILLINOIS

At Shea's in Springfield, Bill Shea has created a shrine to the gas station, the oil company, and the American love affair with the road trip.

In Funks Grove, the bucolic world of the nineteenth century blends seamlessly with the world of the Model T, with Route 66, and with the modern era of the mini van.

R
OADSIDE GHOSTS
and roadside time capsules abound in Illinois, but ghost towns are a rarity and are of a different nature than those found farther west on the plains and desert sands. The rising tide of urban sprawl that spawned the interstate highway and that swept Route 66 from center stage during the last half of the twentieth century began here with the transformation of the venerable two-lane into a four-lane super slab.

As a result, the ghost towns that survive along Route 66 in Illinois do so as dots on a map, made manifest in a service station, transformed into a home or a quiet café, shadowed by centuries-old trees. In most of those that remain, the darkened neon and façades that seemed modern and chic during the era of the Edsel and tail fin often obscure vestiges from the town's long history that predates the automobile by decades.

THE TOWNS THAT COAL BUILT

M
INING GAVE RISE
to a small cluster of towns between Dwight and Wilmington. Of these, only Braidwood and Gardner have survived into the modern era with relative prosperity. The others—Godley, Braceville, and Mazonia—are a string of tarnished gems along old Route 66 with but the faintest of hints that they were once more than dusty, wide spots in the road.

Jack Rittenhouse, in his 1946 classic,
A Guide Book to Highway 66
, writes that Godley was “Once a booming mining community. Now only a few homes remain. South of the town are more slag heaps.” Of Braceville, he says, “Like Godley, this town is but a remnant of a once thriving coal town. As you leave town, the typical slag heaps still blot the countryside.” Mazonia did not warrant mention, and even less remains today.

Kaveneys drugstore, now an antique shop, is just one of the many jewels found in the heart of historic Wilmington.

Wilmington, with a population of more than 5,600, may not be a ghost town per se, but ghostly remnants from an earlier time abound.

In Wilmington, the Dé-Ja-Vu store sign encapsulates the essence of a drive on the iconic highway.

From Wilmington, drive west on State Highway 53 approximately eight miles. Braidwood is north of the tracks on Highway 113. Godley, Braceville, and the site of Mazonia are on Highway 53.

The resurgent interest in Route 66 has spawned time capsule re-creations and restorations, such as this circa-1933 service station in Dwight.

BOOK: Ghost Towns of Route 66
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