ROAD SIGNS
Saving designs for Route 66’s neon art
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. Thanks to her curiosity, Ellen Babcock struck gold.
They were just a bunch of old business records belonging to New Mexico’s oldest sign-making shop, the last of the manufacturers from neon’s midcentury heyday. No longer needed and deemed a fire hazard, the file drawers were moved outside and placed on pallets under a tree.
Babcock spotted them during one of her many visits to Zeon Signs as part of her interest in sign-making and the installation of public artwork in Albuquerque. The University of New Mexico sculpture professor found hundreds of envelopes containing folded drawings of some of the memorable neon signs on Route 66, one of the first roads in the U.S. highway system. It spanned half the country, from Chicago to the West Coast.
The sketches detailed signage for gas stations, motels, burger joints, bowling alleys, dry cleaners and coffee shops. In some cases, they were the only records left of the beacons that lit the famous highway from the 1950s to the 1970s.
“Finely drawn and just gorgeous,” Babcock said of the first drawing she unfolded. It was for the marque of a movie theatre in the town of Grants, west of Albuquerque.
Aside from the sketches, the files included material lists, purchase orders and other correspondence between the designers and business owners who were looking to attract customers.
Babcock and Mark Childs, a professor at the University of New Mexico’s school of architecture, turned the find into a book in 2016. New Mexico preservation officials last week honoured them for their work to salvage the historic drawings.
Some of the signs created by Electrical Products of New Mexico — now Zeon Signs — are still standing in Albuquerque, home to the largest uninterrupted segment of Route 66 left in an urban area. A few have been rehabilitated; many more are dilapidated and have long been dark.