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Blue Swallow Motel

Blue Swallow Motel
Blue Swallow Motel sign from W 1.JPG
General information
Location Tucumcari, New Mexico
Address 815 E Tucumcari Blvd
Other information
Number of rooms 14
Website

www.blueswallowmotel.com

Blue Swallow Motel is located in New Mexico
Blue Swallow Motel
Blue Swallow Motel is located in the US
Blue Swallow Motel
Coordinates 35°10′19″N 103°42′59″W / 35.171866°N 103.716421°W / 35.171866; -103.716421Coordinates: 35°10′19″N 103°42′59″W / 35.171866°N 103.716421°W / 35.171866; -103.716421
Area U.S. Route 66 in New Mexico
Built 1939 (1939)
Architect W. A. Huggins
Architectural style Southwest Vernacular
MPS Route 66 through New Mexico MPS
NRHP Reference # 93001210
NMSRCP # 1575
Significant dates
Added to NRHP November 22, 1993
Designated NMSRCP September 17, 1993

www.blueswallowmotel.com

The Blue Swallow Court in Tucumcari, New Mexico, United States, is a 12-unit L-shaped motel listed on the National Register of Historic Places in New Mexico as a part of historic U.S. Route 66. Original architectural features included a façade with pink stucco walls decorated with shell designs and a stepped parapet, on-site office and manager’s residence and garages located between the sleeping units for travelers to park their motorcars.

The motel was built by carpenter W.A. Huggins in 1939, and by July 1941 was open and operating with a café on-site. Ted and Marjorie Jones came to Tucumcari in 1944, were the first long-term operators of the motel. One of the longest continuously operated motels along New Mexico's slice of Route 66, the property was purchased by Floyd Redman in 1958 as an engagement present to his wife Lillian.

As the Blue Swallow Motel, the property was updated with neon signage proclaiming "TV" and "100% Refrigerated Air". It would continue in operation through both the heyday of post-war tourism on the old US Highway system (when roadside billboards advertised "Tucumcari Tonight!" and "2000 motel rooms" for many miles) and the years of decline which followed the loss of US 66 traffic to a newly constructed Interstate 40 in the 1960s.

When Route 66 was closed to the majority of traffic and the other highway came in, I felt just like I had lost an old friend. But some of us stuck it out and are still here on Route 66.

A resident of Tucumcari since 1923 (having arrived in New Mexico with her family in a covered wagon in 1915), Lillian Redman would operate the Blue Swallow for four decades, continuing independently after Floyd's death in 1973 and ultimately selling the motel in 1998. She then moved to a small house nearby and would often visit the property and its new owners until her death, at 89 years of age, in 1999.

After Lillian Redman sold the motel in 1998, owners Dale and Hilda Bakke made substantial restoration efforts, repairing the 1960 neon lighting, adding a vintage rotary phone system, replacing hardwood flooring with carpeting and monochrome television sets with color TVs. Each room includes vintage lighting and period furniture. Bill and Terri Kinder purchased the Blue Swallow in 2006, selling it to Kevin and Nancy Mueller in 2011.


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