What else is there to do in Adrian, Texas, the midway point on Route 66 that runs from downtown Chicago, Ill., to the Santa Monica Pier in Los Angeles?
After
having enjoyed a delicious home-style cooked meal served with a smile at the
MidPoint Café, visitors may want to sashay over to the Dream
Maker Station Route 66 Souvenir & Gift Shop and meet the owners Jason and
Kelly Snyder.
They are described as being “super friendly and welcoming to all Route 66 road trippers,” offering refreshments appropriate for the season. The store has a complete line of nostalgic Route 66 gifts and souvenirs, including T-shirts, coffee mugs, shot glasses, patches, pins and much more.
Play the pinball machine inside or
sit outside and enjoy watching the Route 66 traffic passing by…and the
ever-changing West Texas weather.
The
historic building was originally Dub’s Enco-Humble Service Station, owned and
operated by Dub Edmunds.
Dream Maker Station organizes and hosts an annual Route 66 Car Show, a popular event in the Texas Panhandle area. This fun event features classic cars, food trucks, vendors, raffles, door prizes and a music DJ.
For
overnight accommodations in Adrian, book a room at the Fabulous 40 Motel on
Route 66, which promotes itself as “the first and last motel in Texas.” The
proprietors of the 20-unit motel are Roy and Ramona Kiewert.
(The original plan called for 40 rooms, hence the name...but things changed.)
The
place appeals to people who are in no rush to move on. In fact, the local
chamber of commerce invites folks to linger long, basking in the glory of “no
smog, no crowds, no lines.”
Adrian
began to take form in 1900 when a Chicago, Rock Island and Gulf Railway survey
team, working west of Amarillo, Texas, identified it as a future site of a
station and shipping point.
The town was named for Adrian Cullen, an early farmer in the area. Its official founding date was 1909, when the railway was completed through that portion of the Oldham County.
Learn more about the history of Adrian and Oldham County at the Julian Bivins Museum, located nearby at Boys Ranch, an unincorporated community on the site of the original county seat at Tascosa.
Once
a raucous pioneer town, Tascosa was known for gunfights and barroom brawls.
The
place was occupied and ruled in 1878 by 19-year-old Henry McCarty, known as
“Billy the Kid,” and his gang, the Regulators. They were notorious horse and
cattle rustlers.
The
origin of Boys Ranch in an interesting story involving the “life and times” of Cal
Farley. He arrived in Amarillo in 1923 to play second base with the Amarillo
Gassers, a minor league baseball team. (Farley is the second from the right in the photo below).
Farley
was an exceptional athlete. As a professional wrestler and World Welterweight
Champion during the 1920s, Farley won 225 straight matches.
In Amarillo, he established a network of Wun-Stop-Duzzit tire shops, reviving several B.F. Goodrich dealerships.
In 1934, Farley started an after-school program for boys in Amarillo, sponsored by the Rotary Club. Interest grew. In 1938, rancher Julian Bivins (shown below) donated about 120 acres of land, about 30 miles northeast of Adrian, for Farley to establish Boys Ranch.
The
facility opened in 1939 with nine boys in residence. The idea was to provide
education and support for “the boy nobody wanted,” giving him “a shirttail to
hang onto.”
Today, Cal Farley’s Boys Ranch is still in operation as a residential community open to at-risk children ages 5 to 18 (both boys and girls). About 300 children live in small cottages at Boys Ranch during the year.
Strong
agricultural and spiritual components anchor the educational curriculum.


























































