Peach Springs

Peach Springs is an unincorporated village of 600 people which serves as base of operation for the native Hualapai Nation of Northern Arizona.

Understand
Peach Springs' map location matches that of the cartoon village Radiator Springs in the 2006 Pixar film "Cars". The tiny village is served by the famed US Route 66, which originally followed the railway across the Arizona desert.

When Interstate 40 bypassed US-66 between Kingman and Seligman, it took a shorter but divergent route far to the south. US-66 is separated from I-40 by twenty miles or more through much of the section through Peach Springs, Hackberry, Valentine and Truxton. The only major cross street joining I-40 to US-66 in this area is Hackberry Road, which has no I-40 offramp.

The steady stream of traffic westward through Peach Springs to California died overnight with most affected villages in the area becoming ghost towns. Peach Springs barely held on, primarily to serve the Hualapai Nation and as a point of depart for travel to the Grand Canyon. When US-66 entirely disappeared from standard road maps in 1985, the section from Kingman to Seligman was numbered as Arizona State Highway 66.

Route 66
The only way in is by motorcar; leave I-40 at Kingman (in the west) or Seligman (in the east) to return to highway 66. The old road is fourteen miles longer than I-40 from Kingman to Seligman but is one of the largest continuous, intact portions of historic Route 66 in Arizona.

By train
The Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railways once served both Hackberry and Peach Springs. The train no longer stops at any intermediate point between Kingman and Williams Junction. One must disembark at Kingman to travel the last 42 miles by car on Route 66.

By plane
Most travelers fly into Las Vegas which is 120 miles away by car. They have an airport for general aviation called Grand Canyon West Airport (GCW), it is owned by the Hualapai Indian Tribe and is on the Hualapai Indian Reservation.

Get around
The 82-mile Arizona Route 66 between Kingman and Seligman is for the most part little more than ghost town. There are few services; at one point, there was only one fuel station open on this entire stretch of road.

Do

 * Whitewater Rafting in Grand Canyon: 1-day trip meets at 7:30AM at Hualapai River Runners Lodge, returns at approximately 6PM. includes helicopter flight out of canyon, box lunch, 35 miles of river and 7 wet rapids in the first 10 miles.

Eat
There are restaurants in the Hualapai Lodge (Diamond Creek Restaurant, +1 928 769-2800) and inside Grand Canyon Caverns (Cavern Grotto, +1 928 422-3223).



Sleep




Nearby
Continuing westward from Peach Springs, Route 66 passed through three more villages (all now ghost towns or former ghost towns) before I-40 rejoined US-66 at Kingman.

Hackberry

 * A former ghost town; this village once had a few fuel stations and stores. The town died in the 1970s with the construction of I-40 and the roadside businesses closed. From 1992-1998, Hackberry was the home of late Route 66 travelling artist Bob Waldmire, at one time the town's only resident. Waldmire was based at what is now the, now a popular tourist stop with a collection of old and classic motorcars. He travelled the route in an old VW hippie van creating and selling elaborate hand-drawn maps. (In the "Cars" film, the "Fillmore" character is unofficially based on Waldmire; the original van is now in the Route 66 Hall of Fame in Pontiac (Illinois).)

Valentine

 * Home of a former native residential school, the Schoolhouse at Truxton Canyon, now listed on the national register of historic places.

Truxton
A "new ghost town", Truxton (west of Peach Springs on Route 66, established in 1951, bypassed 1979 by I-40) had several fuel stations (Bell, Texaco, Chevron), a café and an assortment of motels which are still standing but long abandoned. The former Cowgill's Trading Post (2006) became a Gas & Grub, but there is no lodging. The last inns were the Orlando Motel (16213 Highway 66) and the Frontier Motel &amp; Café (16118 E Highway 66). Established in 1951, the once-distinctive Frontier had declined for years, closing upon the owner's death in 2012. It's likely the best-preserved of the vacant local buildings, as a short-lived restoration effort had a souvenir shop open in 2014 (which closed in 2015). The motel's 1950s tiles, furnishings and décor were a throwback to a simpler era when a TV in every room earned boasting rights.

Go next

 * Grand Canyon