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P.O. Box 19423
Lenexa,
KS 66285
913-708-5119
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NEW
MEXICO LEGENDS
Santa Rosa- City of
Natural Lakes |
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Greetings From
Santa Rosa,
Vintage
Postcard
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Santa Rosa,
New Mexico,
known as the “City of Natural Lakes,” is called thus due the many
natural lakes and streams of the area. Situated where the Great
Plains rise up to meet the Rocky Mountains, lies this startling oasis,
amid the red mesas of the flat lands.
Founded
in 1865, the town began as nothing more than a large Spanish Rancho,
and was called Aqua Negro Chiquita. Sometime around 1890, it
took a new name honoring a chapel built by Don Celso Baco who named it
for his wife and Saint Rose of Lima, the first canonized Saint of the
“New World.”
Guadalupe County was created by the territorial
legislature in 1891 with Puerto de Luna as the county seat.
Santa Rosa
remained a minor community until the
Chicago,
Rock Island & Pacific Railroad steamed into town in 1901, then became
an important transportation hub of the area. Just two
years later,
Santa Rosa
became the Guadalupe County seat.
When
Route 66
was completed through
Santa Rosa
in 1930, transportation services again increased in the city. During the days of early
Route 66,
after travelers had tired of the long, hot, dusty miles,
Santa Rosa
became known as a welcome and well-known oasis in the desert.
Travelers arrived in
Santa Rosa
to eat, rest, and perform car repairs, if necessary, at the many
motels, cafes and service stations that lined the highway.
The old road ran into town past the
81-foot-deep Blue Hole and Park Lake, a motorist campground and source
of water during the Depression. Scenes in Rudolfo Anaya's
award-winning novel, Bless Me, and John Steinbeck's, Grapes
of Wrath, took place on
Route 66
at the Pecos River Bridge.
In 1935 Phillip Craig and Floyd Shaw built
the Club Café with the smiling, satisfied face of the Fat Man. For more than fifty years, thousands of hungry
Route 66
travelers would stop to enjoy a tasty home cooked meal. The logo
of the Fat Man soon became synonymous with
Route 66
in Santa
Rosa.
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In
1940, when Steinbeck’s epic novel, Grapes of Wrath, was made into a
movie, director John Ford used
Santa Rosa
for the memorable train scene, where Tom Joad (Henry Fonda) watches a
freight train steam over the Pecos River railroad bridge, into the sunset.
In
1972, I-40 opened through
Santa Rosa,
and though the city remained a busy off-ramp, many of the vintage
Route 66
businesses began to die. However, others continued to serve the
exiting travelers of I-40, including the Club Café that survived for
almost another twenty years. Finally, it too, served its last meal
in 1991. The Club Cafe stood vacant and soon fell into disrepair
with the passing of the years.
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The Old Club Cafe, courtesy
US
Army Corp of Engineers
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The Club Cafe today, David Alexander, May,
2004.
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Joseph and Christina
Campos, who own Joseph’s Bar and Grill down the road on
Route 66,
purchased the building with plans to reopen the Club Café. Unfortunately, the building was too far-gone to resurrect. However,
they did resurrect the Fat Man, bringing him home to Joseph’s Bar and
Grill, saving the famous "Fat Man" icon.
Today, there are plenty
of signs of the good ole’ days of
Route 66
through Santa
Rosa. Look for “billboards” painted on huge roadside boulders
and the still-grinning faces of Fat Man billboards before you enter the
town. A particularly scenic stretch of
Route 66
parallels Interstate 40 and can be accessed from the three exits east of
the city. Once you enter
Santa Rosa,
you can see the Comet Drive In, Silver Moon, Sun and Sand, and the La Loma
Motel. If you’re traveling at night, the neon lights will thrill
your Route 66
sensibilities. While in Santa Rosa, another “must stop” is the
Route 66
Auto Museum.
More activities abound at
the area lakes where you can scuba dive at the Blue Hole, fish at natural
Perch or Park Lakes, and enjoy all the amenities of a large man-made lake,
such as boating, skiing and camping at
Santa Rosa
Lake State Park. A side trip well worth the trip is the ancient adobe
village of Puerto de Luna, just ten miles south of
Santa Rosa.
In the early days of
Route 66,
from 1926 through 1937, the old alignment of
Route 66
left Santa
Rosa to continue on towards
Santa Fe,
the capitol of
New Mexico, before dropping back down to
Albuquerque
and Los Lunas. In late 1937
Route 66
was straightened out to go directly to
Albuquerque
and bypassed
Santa Fe completely.
Here, you will need to make a choice as to
which alignment you will take westward to
Albuquerque.
Both alignments are a delight as
you pass by numerous vintage peeks of the
Mother Road, historic places,
ghost towns,
and beautiful views.
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See More
Santa Rosa Pictures and Attractions Next Page
Kathy Weiser/Legends
of America, © July, 2005 |
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Joseph's Bar & Grill in
Santa Rosa,
David Alexander,
May, 2004 |
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Route
66 Signs For All Eight States - Collect all the shields of the
eight states along the
Mother Road.
These metal signs are silk screened on solid metal and have hemmed edges.
Ready for hanging from
pre-drilled holes in the corners. Put it up in your bar, dorm room,
game room, kitchen, garage, patio or anywhere you'd like! Makes a GREAT
gift for your family and friends!
Measures approximately 11"x11" Collect
all eight states!!
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