Posts Tagged ‘roadside attraction’
Sign Seeker: Los Ojos Bar, Jemez Springs, NM
Along the beautiful Jemez Mountain Trail National Scenic Byway, the small town of Jemez Springs, NM has some treasures, including the Los Ojos Bar. What was originally built as a mercantile in the late 19th Century, become the Los Ojos Bar in 1947. Throughout the years, the building has served as many different businesses, but…
Read MoreSign Seeker: The Win Place Show Bar, Ruidoso, NM
The Win Place and Show Bar in Ruidoso, NM has been in business since 1956. Not just a bar, the Win Place and Show also has live music, axe throwing, and package liquor sales. We’re unsure of the age of the sign, but did learn it once had neon which was removed, and the sign…
Read MoreTwo-Lane Tidbit: Stations of the Cross, San Luis, CO
Sitting atop La Mesa de la Piedad y de la Misericordia (the Hill of Piety and Misery) in San Luis, CO, the oldest town in Colorado, is the Shrine of the Stations of the Cross. Fifteen bronze statues created by local artist Huberto Maestas depicting the Stations of the Cross, the final hours of Jesus’…
Read MoreTwo-Lane Tidbit: Mexican Canyon Railroad Trestle, Cloudcroft, NM
Near Cloudcroft, NM is the Mexican Canyon Trestle, a portion of the former Alamogordo and Sacramento Mountain Railway. Constructed in 1899 and in use until 1947, it stands 52 over the valley floor, runs 323 feet in length, and was one of 58 trestles built on a 32-mile track from Alamogordo to numerous timber areas…
Read MoreTwo-Lane Tidbit: Smokey Bear Historical Park, Capitan, NM
Everyone is familiar with Smokey Bear and his important message about preventing wildfires, but did you know that Smokey Bear was a real bear? The longest-running public service announcement advertising campaign in American history, Smokey first appeared in 1944. The famous “Remember…only YOU can prevent forest fires” slogan was created in 1947 and used until…
Read MoreTwo-Lane Tidbit: Wheat Growers Hotel, Kimball, NE
When it opened in 1918, the Wheat Growers Hotel in Kimball, NE was said to be “the most glamorous hotel between Omaha and Denver”. Just a few blocks off the Lincoln Highway, future president Eisenhower stayed at the hotel in 1919 while traveling across the country on the Lincoln Highway with the Motor Transport Corps…
Read MoreTwo-Lane Tidbit: Panorama Point, Bushnell, NE
Panorama Point, the highest point in Nebraska at 5,424 feet above sea level, is a short drive off of the Lincoln Highway. Located on private property in the middle of a bison ranch, visitors are only permitted to drive in to the site (no hiking, because no one wants a close encounter with a bison).…
Read MoreTwo-Lane Tidbit: Crossan’s M&A Market, Yampa, CO
A tiny town with just one paved road, Yampa, CO, which lies between Steamboat Springs and Vail, is home to Crossan’s M&A Market. The heart of town for decades, it opened in 1903 in anticipation of the coming railroad and was the community general store until its closure in 1964. After its closure, it sat…
Read MoreTwo-Lane Tidbit: Warden’s House, Cañon City, CO
Cañon City, CO is home to more than the famous Royal Gorge Bridge, it’s also home to the Colorado Territorial Correctional Facility. Despite digging we can’t quite get a straight story, but as we once heard, way back in 1868 (before Colorado was a state), Cañon City had the choice of the state prison or…
Read MoreTwo-Lane Tidbit: Dinosaur, CO
In the far northwest corner of Colorado, the westernmost town in the state, Dinosaur, welcomes visitors as they head to Dinosaur National Monument. Originally named Baxter Springs for the couple that owned the town, in the 1930s the town was more frequently referred to as Artesia and was officially incorporated as such in 1947. In…
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