A new highway nearly killed his town. This 98-year-old 'Angel of Route 66' helped bring America's most famous highway back to life

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Long before Route 66 became a nostalgic symbol of American road trips , it was a vital highway connecting small towns across the United States. But when Interstate 40 bypassed many of these communities in the 1980s, businesses closed, tourists disappeared and towns like Seligman, Arizona, faced an uncertain future. One local barber, however, refused to let history fade away. At 98, Angel Delgadillo continues to greet travellers from around the world, earning the affectionate title of the " Angel of Route 66 ". His determination not only revived his hometown but also helped transform the iconic highway into one of the world's most celebrated heritage routes.
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How a small-town barber helped bring America's Route 66 back to life
Born on April 19, 1927, in Seligman, Arizona, Angel V. Delgadillo Jr. grew up in a large Mexican-American family whose parents had immigrated to the United States from Jalisco and Aguascalientes, Mexico, in 1917. His father, a self-taught barber, provided haircuts to Mexican and Native American residents in the segregated town, introducing Angel to a profession that would shape his life.


After graduating from Seligman High School in 1947, Delgadillo attended the American Pacific Barber College in Pasadena, California, before completing his apprenticeship in Williams, Arizona. He returned to Seligman in 1950 and opened his own barbershop in his father's former pool hall along Route 66, later relocating to a new shop on the highway's updated alignment in 1972 to attract more customers.


The fortunes of both his business and the town changed dramatically in 1978 when Interstate 40 bypassed Seligman, diverting travellers away from Route 66. Local businesses struggled, tourism collapsed and many residents feared the town would slowly disappear. As reported by BBC, rather than watching his hometown decline, Delgadillo emerged as one of the strongest advocates for preserving the historic highway.


In 1987, he helped establish the Historic Route 66 Association of Arizona, an organisation dedicated to protecting and promoting Arizona's section of the Mother Road. The association successfully persuaded the state to recognise surviving stretches of Route 66 as a historic route, inspiring similar preservation organisations across the other Route 66 states and even internationally. His efforts transformed Seligman into a major destination for heritage tourism , proving that one person's determination could help revive an iconic piece of American history.


Why Angel Delgadillo became the face of Route 66's revival
Delgadillo believed that saving Route 66 was about far more than preserving an old highway, it was about protecting the livelihoods, history and identity of the communities that had grown alongside it. His modest barbershop in Seligman evolved into an unofficial welcome centre, where visitors from across the United States, Europe, Asia and Australia stopped not only for a haircut but also to hear first-hand stories about the road's heyday and its decline after the construction of Interstate 40. Through these personal conversations, Delgadillo became one of the most recognisable ambassadors of the "Mother Road", encouraging travellers to explore its historic towns rather than simply pass them by.


His advocacy helped transform Seligman from a struggling bypassed town into one of Route 66's most iconic destinations. As tourism steadily returned, classic diners, vintage motels, gift shops and restored roadside attractions reopened, breathing new life into the local economy. The success of Seligman's revival demonstrated that heritage tourism could preserve both cultural history and small-town businesses, inspiring other communities along Route 66 to restore their own landmarks and embrace the road's nostalgic appeal.


Delgadillo's influence even extended to Hollywood. While researching what became Pixar's Cars (2006), director John Lasseter travelled along Route 66 and spent time with Delgadillo in Seligman. Their conversations about the impact of interstate highways on small American towns helped shape the emotional backdrop of the film. Although Pixar has never identified a single real-life model for Radiator Springs, Seligman is widely regarded as one of its key inspirations, and Delgadillo's lifelong campaign to revive Route 66 is often credited with influencing the film's central message about preserving forgotten communities and celebrating America's historic roadside culture.