
For a quick fix to get your kicks on 66, pile the family or friends into the coupe and head north to Atlanta, Illinois. Fewer than 50 miles from Springfield, Atlanta is chock full of enough Mother Road memorabilia to make your own memories.
You can snap a photo under a 19-foot, hot dog-holding Paul Bunyan statue, spend a quart of quarters on vintage arcade games, admire an octagon-shaped library, learn about old grain elevators, pick up some kitsch and treat the gang to apple pie or chocolate sundaes topped with a dose of nostalgia.
Those tasty treats and more from the historic Palms Grill Café are a popular draw for visitors, and it was the Grill’s reopening in 2009 that spurred tourist development in Atlanta, according to Bill Thomas, economic development director for Logan County.
“We have worked very hard at re-creating the experience of what it would have been like to visit and travel through a small town on Route 66 in the 1930s and 1940s,” Thomas said.
While the Grill remains the destination for thousands of Route 66 aficionados from throughout the world, you should save enough time to fill up on Atlanta’s other offerings. Fall is an especially good season with the Atlanta Fall Festival on tap for Sept. 8-10 with carnival rides, special food and a parade.
Atlanta is Illinois’ geographic center on Route 66 and was once a handy stop for travelers. Town folks have built on that history by adding such icons as the Bunyan statue, which harkened hungry diners to an eatery on the legendary highway in Cicero, near Chicago. Now the lumberjack looms over Arch Street, the main road through downtown Atlanta.
Visitors can gaze up at murals on the sides of several buildings depicting life in the earlier days of Route 66. A corner park displays town landmarks and a few highway souvenirs.
Children of all ages will clamor for more coins at the Route 66 Arcade Museum, filled with pinball and early video games. The museum’s slogan, “Come, Misspend Your Youth One Quarter at a Time,” seems apt. It is free to enter and open 9-4 Monday through Saturday.
Drag yourself away from those games to peek at the nearby Atlanta Public Library and clock tower. Built in 1908, the library features wooden trim and shelves, comfortable armchairs, a children’s room and a sense of the time when libraries and not websites were our source of knowledge. The clock tower adds to the town’s charm, and volunteers hand-wind the clock weekly.
Just down the street is the wooden J.H.
Hawes
Grain Elevator, which, like the library, is listed on the National
Register of Historic Places. It served area farmers from 1903 to 1976
and sported some innovations for its time, including a vertical bucket
conveyor system powered by a gasoline engine. The town bought the
abandoned building in 1988 and got donations from several businesses to
restore it.
The
elevator usually is open for tours only on Sunday afternoons in June,
July and August, but visitors can call 309-830-8306 to arrange a free
tour or they may simply walk around the grounds.
To
learn more about the town’s history, stop by the Atlanta Museum on Arch
Street when it is open 9-5 weekdays and by appointment on weekends. You
can view photos, public records, historic documents and memorabilia.
If
you are lucky, the Route 66 Memories Museum will be open with the
private collection of a local resident, who has gathered a 1964 Rolls
Royce, a wooden cigar store statue and other antiques. Museum hours
vary; call 309-275-1920 to check. The building has large windows so you
can see some things even it is closed.
For
memorabilia of your own, visit a gift and antique shop on Arch Street
for Route 66 souvenirs, T-shirts to prove you were there and enough
antiques to fill several houses.
A
perfect way to top off your day is a meal or dessert at the Palms Grill
Café in the middle of downtown. Once a bus stop, the restaurant offers
blue plate specials, sandwiches, handmade milk shakes, pies, sundaes and
other fountain treats. Waitresses wear period uniforms, and the decor
is reminiscent of diners from the 1940s, complete with glasscovered pie
stands and coffee in sturdy mugs.
You
can twirl on the counter stools while listening to music from
yesteryear and the variety of languages from travelers intent on getting
their kicks on 66.
Mary
Bohlen is a Springfield-based freelance writer and retired journalism
professor from the University of Illinois Springfield.
For
more information on Atlanta, call the Logan County economic development
offi ce at 217- 648-5077. (The town’s website is not always current.)
Call 217-648-2112 for hours and activities at the Atlanta Library. The
Palms Grill Café’s number is 217-648-2233; the café also maintains a
Facebook page.