Info

Route 66 Podcast

Route 66 Stories as told by people living and working along The Mother Road
RSS Feed Subscribe in Apple Podcasts
Route 66 Podcast
2023
November
August
June
May
April


2022
December
October
March
January


2021
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
January


2020
November
July
June
May
April
March
February
January


2019
May
January


2018
December
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
February
January


2017
October
September
August
July
May
February


2016
December
November
October
August
July


All Episodes
Archives
Now displaying: October, 2017
Oct 29, 2017

The Road Crew – America’s Route 66 Band takes the Mother Road to their audiences throughout the world.  “We spread the history and stories of Route 66 to every generation through our ‘Songs From The Mother Road.’  We encourage our audiences to discover America’s Main Street for themselves.” The band received the first time ever ‘Bobby Troup Artistic Recognition Award’ from the International Route 66 Association in 2011. The Road Crew – The official musical ambassadors for The Mother Road!

Oct 2, 2017

Fort Reno in Oklahoma was once the home to 1300 German Prisoners of War (POW's) during World War II.  Originally established in 1874 to protect the Darlington Indian Reservation.  Fort Reno was used as a horse training camp for WW I and WW II, and the site was later used to house German soldiers who were captured in Northern Africa during WW II.

Carolyn Barker shares some of the most fascinating (and unknown) stories about the Fort Reno POW camp.  While nothing but a water tower remains from the POW camp, there is a cemetery with 62 soldiers who were laid to rest.  These solndiers died from war injuries, illnesses, accidents, and even a murder where five POW's were charged and eventually hung.

 

Carolyn tells a number of very touching stories, including the reaction from German soldiers who honestly believed that New York was entirely leveled during the war and wondered how the city could have been built back so quickly; the loyalty of German soldiers to the local community who assisted local farmers during the war effort, and the repatriation of soldiers who were buried in Oklahoma and later relocated back to their motherland after family members discovered they were laid to rest in Oklahoma.

1