Summer 2026

Summer in Missouri is a great season! Hot days followed by soft warm evenings encourage us to get outside to enjoy both activities at home and for travel. We mix yard work with summer sports and recreation.The kids are out of school and Missouri’s travel locations call us to enjoy important family time.

In order to help you plan your trips, I have researched some Missouri travel internet sites.

The historic Route 66 that crosses Missouri from St. Louis to Joplin is the subject of this issue’s cover story. The 300-plus miles of the highway in Missouri provides a history of the old road. Parts of the original highway are now covered by more modern highways, but the charm of the original is still there. The road was called “the Mother Road” and was one of the first continuous stretches of paved highway in the US. It began in 1926.

In the 1960s, I loved following the adventures of Todd and Buzz as they traveled Route 66 in their Corvette on the television show that shared its name with the highway. In that show (
Route66roadtrip.com/route-66-tv-series.htm). I never got the Corvette that I wanted so much when I was 16, but I certainly have fond memories of the four seasons of that show.

A good place to visit both IRL and online is the Route 66 Museum (
Lebanon-Laclede.lib.mo.us/66-museum/route-66-museum-home) in Lebanon. The museum is free and self-guided.

Springfield is often called the birthplace of Route 66. Good photos and plenty of background information can be found at
SpringfieldMo.org/blog/post/birthplace-of-route-66.
A few miles south of Springfield in Ozark is one of three Lambert’s Restaurants (
ThrowedRolls.com/ozark-mo). I once met Norm Lambert, the son of founders Earl and Agnes Lambert, at the original Sikeston location.

Paris Springs, just west of Springfield, is the home of Gary’s Gay Parita, a restored Sinclair service station. The station, which can also be found online at
Route66RoadRelics.com/destination/missouri/ash-grove-missouri-route-66, is a living museum with vintage cars, classic Sinclair advertising signs and more.

Another restored service station and gift shop, Spencer Station (SpencerStation.myshopify.com), is located just down the road in Miller, population 720. Perhaps the town (
CityofMillerMO.org) was founded by one of my ancestors!

Another famous highway in Missouri is Highway 61. This year Highway 61 also celebrates its 100th birthday. The present-day course of U.S. 61 south of St. Louis largely follows the original course of the Spanish colonial road El Camino Real. The highway began in 1776, when the Spanish lieutenant governor recognized that the two principal communities of St. Louis and Ste. Genevieve needed a connecting highway.

Ste. Genevieve is the oldest permanent European settlement in Missouri, and there is a lot of history to be discovered there.
VisitSteGen.com provides a sample of what the city offers. I have been there a number of times and found the history and the people very interesting. Most of the restaurants offer a local specialty, liver dumplings. I know, they have liver in them but they are really good. Give them a try.

I hope you have a great Missouri summer as you travel our historic highways or through your computer screen. If you should see me catching a throwed roll or enjoying some liver dumplings, be sure to say hi. I still don’t have a Corvette, but I can share some incidents from Route 66 anyway. Good Missouri food, good friends and good stories makes a great combination.