
Route 66, Red Oaks II - Lucky 7 - Carthage, Missouri, USA.
N 37° 12.769 W 094° 16.608
15S E 386710 N 4119244
A Route 66, Lucky 7 with a Tally of 14. All within Red Oak's II - A relocated Town with original vintage 1920's buildings, created by artist Lowell Davis over the last decade. A whimsical Route 66 roadside attraction, near Carthage, Missouri.
Waymark Code: WMPM5D
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 09/18/2015
Views: 3
Take a stroll through the past in the number One ranked tourist attraction in Carthage. Red Oaks II is a unique, quirky & whimsical, village with many sculptures & odd ball attractions, amongst real working vintage buildings, including the Oldest Phillips Gas Station along Route 66. If you want Photos of Vintage American, this place is a photographers dream.
The Transplanted Town of Red Oaks II is the home of Lowell Davies, he loves talking to his visitors from all over the World.
I think this is the by far the best attraction along the Missouri section of Route 66 corridor.
Click on the Map to see pictures of the Village: (
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From the Roadside America Web site: (
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"Lowell Davis has moved an entire pioneer Missouri town from its original site, 25 miles away, and reassembled it as Red Oak II. Heralded by roadside Burma Shave-style signs, the buildings there have been preserved as a credible replica of a crossroads town, circa 1929, and include an antique Phillips 66 gas station, a general store, a blacksmith's shop, a feed store, a town hall, a one-room school house, an old country church, and a cemetery.
The town also includes a streetcar diner, Belle Starr's home, and the oldest surviving Standard Oil gas station from Route 66."
From the Legends of America Web Site: (
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"A couple of miles northeast of Carthage, Missouri and just off Route 66 is Red Oak II – a ghost town, but not really. But, it has authentic old buildings, and an old cemetery, and it looks like a ghost town. Well, it is and it isn’t.
Red Oak II was actually the brainchild of artist Lowell Davis who grew up in the "real” Red Oak, Missouri, about 18 miles northwest of the "new” Red Oak II. The original Red Oak, like many other rural agricultural towns across the country, started to fade sometime after World War II, when people began to move to the cities in earnest.
After Davis had left the area for a number of years, he returned in the 1970’s to find his home town had become a ghost town."
1-Animals
2-Buildings> Vintage Gas Stations> Phillps 66 - Avilla Gas Station (
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3-Business
4-Culture> Silhouette Public Art Sculptures> Boy's Night Out (
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5-Entertainment> Official Local Tourism Attractions> Red Oaks II (
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6-History> Route 66 - The Mother Road> Red Oaks II - Route 66 (
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7-Measurement
8-Monuments
9-Nature
10-Oddities>
11-Recreation> Roadside Attractions> Red Oaks II - Transplanted Town (
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12-Signs
13-Structures> Fountains> Plumbers Fountain - Red Oaks II (
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14-Technology> Permanent Car Displays> Old Buick Eight (
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15- Multifarious>