 
The Magic Gate - Part 1
Four Corners Region
Arizona Highways - Colorado Sunsets
In ’65, I was seventeen.  That spring, after 
perusing an issue of Arizona Highways Magazine, my father asked if I 
would accompany him on a road trip to the Four Corners states of 
Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado and Utah.  I jumped at the chance.
In August 1965, we departed Los Angeles in 	 	our 1964 Ford Galaxy 500 XL,
 2-door, hardtop.  The only equipment lacking on our Ford was an 
overflow tank for the superheated coolant that spewed past the radiator 
at each stopping point in the desert.
Early on, while traveling to summer camp, I had seen parts of the  	Mojave Desert
 from a school bus window.  My other desert experience consisted of 
viewing Walt Disney’s 1953 film, “The Living Desert”.  After viewing 
Disney’s documentary, I abandoned my belief that all deserts were 
inhospitable places, better left to the likes of the Twenty Mule Team 
from Borax.
Over forty years ago, as our trip progressed, new 
sections of Interstate Highway rapidly replaced or bypassed The Mother 
Road, Old Route 66.  Whether it was on Old-66 or new I-40, my first 
taste of desert heat was in Needles, California.  There, an outdoor thermometer read 117 degrees.  To me, the town “Needles” and the word “needless” had a lot in common.
From Needles, both Route 66 and I-40 crossed the Colorado River, and then ran north towards Kingman, Arizona. 
 Ironically,  	Old-66 took the shorter, if steeper route.  In contrast, 
I-40 ran east for many miles before turning north.  The road from 
Kingman to  Flagstaff,
 Arizona was like a 150-mile slow-motion roller coaster ride.  From 
Needles, our overall elevation gain was almost 7000 feet.  In the same 
spirit that their ancestors joined the Saints in the old Utah Territory 
or explored the African savannah, contemporary Europeans seek the open 
spaces of the Southwest.  Studies indicate that humans, regardless of 
their origin, choose open grasslands and wide vistas over any other 
idealized environment.  In my memory, Flagstaff consisted of nothing 
more than one grade crossing and a nearby railroad station.  Since then,
 Flagstaff has transformed itself into a major city, now utilizing Winslow, Arizona, sixty miles to the east as its more affordable suburb.
Flagstaff,
 Arizona was like a 150-mile slow-motion roller coaster ride.  From 
Needles, our overall elevation gain was almost 7000 feet.  In the same 
spirit that their ancestors joined the Saints in the old Utah Territory 
or explored the African savannah, contemporary Europeans seek the open 
spaces of the Southwest.  Studies indicate that humans, regardless of 
their origin, choose open grasslands and wide vistas over any other 
idealized environment.  In my memory, Flagstaff consisted of nothing 
more than one grade crossing and a nearby railroad station.  Since then,
 Flagstaff has transformed itself into a major city, now utilizing Winslow, Arizona, sixty miles to the east as its more affordable suburb.
 Flagstaff,
 Arizona was like a 150-mile slow-motion roller coaster ride.  From 
Needles, our overall elevation gain was almost 7000 feet.  In the same 
spirit that their ancestors joined the Saints in the old Utah Territory 
or explored the African savannah, contemporary Europeans seek the open 
spaces of the Southwest.  Studies indicate that humans, regardless of 
their origin, choose open grasslands and wide vistas over any other 
idealized environment.  In my memory, Flagstaff consisted of nothing 
more than one grade crossing and a nearby railroad station.  Since then,
 Flagstaff has transformed itself into a major city, now utilizing Winslow, Arizona, sixty miles to the east as its more affordable suburb.
Flagstaff,
 Arizona was like a 150-mile slow-motion roller coaster ride.  From 
Needles, our overall elevation gain was almost 7000 feet.  In the same 
spirit that their ancestors joined the Saints in the old Utah Territory 
or explored the African savannah, contemporary Europeans seek the open 
spaces of the Southwest.  Studies indicate that humans, regardless of 
their origin, choose open grasslands and wide vistas over any other 
idealized environment.  In my memory, Flagstaff consisted of nothing 
more than one grade crossing and a nearby railroad station.  Since then,
 Flagstaff has transformed itself into a major city, now utilizing Winslow, Arizona, sixty miles to the east as its more affordable suburb.
Four Corners
Remembering our 1965 trip engenders in me nostalgia 
for a bygone era.  Interestingly, people from outside the U.S. seem to 
share that nostalgia.  In particular, the British, Dutch, Germans and 
Scandinavians arrive here by the thousands each summer.  Often, they 
rent motor homes, bent on rediscovering 
In
 1965, the combined population of Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado and Utah
 was about seven million.  New Mexico then topped Utah by sixty 
thousand.  Today, the Four Corners has a population of almost eighteen 
million.  Utah now outpaces New Mexico by seven hundred thousand.  
Suffice to say the Four Corners supports eleven million more people 
today than in 1965.
 “Flag”,
 as the locals call it, etched a visual imprint on my mind.  I can still
 see what I call the Magic Gate, where South Beaver Street crossed the 
main line of the Santa Fe Railroad. 
 In my memory, Flagstaff consisted of nothing more than one grade 
crossing and a nearby railroad station.  Since then, Flagstaff has 
transformed itself into a major city, now utilizing  	Winslow, Arizona, sixty miles to the east as its more affordable suburb.  	South of there, at Snowflake, lived 	World Citizen, Kathy  	Hemenway.
“Flag”,
 as the locals call it, etched a visual imprint on my mind.  I can still
 see what I call the Magic Gate, where South Beaver Street crossed the 
main line of the Santa Fe Railroad. 
 In my memory, Flagstaff consisted of nothing more than one grade 
crossing and a nearby railroad station.  Since then, Flagstaff has 
transformed itself into a major city, now utilizing  	Winslow, Arizona, sixty miles to the east as its more affordable suburb.  	South of there, at Snowflake, lived 	World Citizen, Kathy  	Hemenway.From Flag, we headed east on Santa Fe Avenue, better known as  	Old-66, only to discover that the Mother Road was being replaced by I-40.  From Flagstaff, the Santa Fe rail line 
took the most direct route east, turning only when necessary to follow 
the easiest grade.  Likewise, Old-66 and I-40 share almost identical 
routes, closely following the tracks.  The result is that the same 
Petrified Forest, Native American trading posts and historic motels that we saw in 1965 still lie adjacent to the current highway.
 was being replaced by I-40.  From Flagstaff, the Santa Fe rail line 
took the most direct route east, turning only when necessary to follow 
the easiest grade.  Likewise, Old-66 and I-40 share almost identical 
routes, closely following the tracks.  The result is that the same 
Petrified Forest, Native American trading posts and historic motels that we saw in 1965 still lie adjacent to the current highway.
 was being replaced by I-40.  From Flagstaff, the Santa Fe rail line 
took the most direct route east, turning only when necessary to follow 
the easiest grade.  Likewise, Old-66 and I-40 share almost identical 
routes, closely following the tracks.  The result is that the same 
Petrified Forest, Native American trading posts and historic motels that we saw in 1965 still lie adjacent to the current highway.
 was being replaced by I-40.  From Flagstaff, the Santa Fe rail line 
took the most direct route east, turning only when necessary to follow 
the easiest grade.  Likewise, Old-66 and I-40 share almost identical 
routes, closely following the tracks.  The result is that the same 
Petrified Forest, Native American trading posts and historic motels that we saw in 1965 still lie adjacent to the current highway. At Gallup, New Mexico
 we drove east on  	Old-66 towards downtown.  Featuring substantial 
brick buildings, it was a regional center for trade and tourism.  
Traveling down that same road today reveals a scene little changed since
 1965.  All along I-40, older towns have remained in place, with new 
construction occurred at either end of town.
At Gallup, New Mexico
 we drove east on  	Old-66 towards downtown.  Featuring substantial 
brick buildings, it was a regional center for trade and tourism.  
Traveling down that same road today reveals a scene little changed since
 1965.  All along I-40, older towns have remained in place, with new 
construction occurred at either end of town.  From Gallup, we drove north on Old U.S. Highway 
666.  With the Devil’s popularity in contemporary American culture, the 
moniker “Highway 666” tempted many.  Not withstanding the risk of “going
 to hell” for stealing highway
 signs, travelers made illegal souvenirs of Old-666 markers.  In 2003, 
New Mexico, Colorado and Utah gave up the fight, changing the road’s 
designation to the benign but meaningless “U.S. Highway 491”.  Ironically, new highway signposts often have “Old Highway 666” signs attached just below their new Highway 491 signs.
 Each afternoon, for the duration of our trip we experienced the gift of rainfall, either in the form of  	desert thunderstorms
 or  	mountain showers.  In the late 1960s, American pilots returning 
from Vietnam to airbases in the Southwest recognized a similarity to the
 pattern of rain they had seen in Southeast Asia.  “Monsoon”, a word 
with Dutch, Portuguese and Arabic origins thus made its way into our 
weather lexicon.
Each afternoon, for the duration of our trip we experienced the gift of rainfall, either in the form of  	desert thunderstorms
 or  	mountain showers.  In the late 1960s, American pilots returning 
from Vietnam to airbases in the Southwest recognized a similarity to the
 pattern of rain they had seen in Southeast Asia.  “Monsoon”, a word 
with Dutch, Portuguese and Arabic origins thus made its way into our 
weather lexicon.  Durango
Since its establishment in the 1880s,  	Durango, Colorado
 has nestled itself into the narrows of the Upper Animas River Valley.  
On our 1965 visit, the town had not yet expanded beyond its original 
borders.  Today, a regional shopping center featuring Wal-Mart and Home 
Depot greets travelers arriving from  	Aztec, New Mexico  	in the south.  
With Durango’s gentrification came new residents who
 did not appreciate steam locomotives in nearby barns, puffing coal 
smoke into the night air.  A recent Durango Herald letter to the editor asked that the locomotives extinguish their fireboxes each night, so that nearby residents could 
sleep in peace and clean air.  Old wags pointed out that one could not 
restart a locomotive each day as if it were a diesel engine.  The 
general sentiment in the community was, “if you do not like coal smoke, 
 	move elsewhere”.
 extinguish their fireboxes each night, so that nearby residents could 
sleep in peace and clean air.  Old wags pointed out that one could not 
restart a locomotive each day as if it were a diesel engine.  The 
general sentiment in the community was, “if you do not like coal smoke, 
 	move elsewhere”. 
 extinguish their fireboxes each night, so that nearby residents could 
sleep in peace and clean air.  Old wags pointed out that one could not 
restart a locomotive each day as if it were a diesel engine.  The 
general sentiment in the community was, “if you do not like coal smoke, 
 	move elsewhere”.
 extinguish their fireboxes each night, so that nearby residents could 
sleep in peace and clean air.  Old wags pointed out that one could not 
restart a locomotive each day as if it were a diesel engine.  The 
general sentiment in the community was, “if you do not like coal smoke, 
 	move elsewhere”. Read Part 2 of this five-part story  	about the Four Corner States.
By James McGillis at 03:03 PM | Travel | Comments (0) | Link


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