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What do Black History Month and Route 66 have in common?

A Missouri State professor details the little-known connection as the next African-American Heritage Trail marker is set to be unveiled.

February 3, 2026 by Strategic Communication

UPDATE
2:23 p.m., Feb 18

The 11th marker in the Springfield-Greene County African American Heritage Trail will be unveiled at 4 p.m., Feb. 26 in the Crystal Room of Kentwood Hall on the Missouri State University campus.

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This year marks the 100th anniversary of Black History Month in America. What began as a singular week of learning and recognition called Negro History Week in 1926 has grown into an overall cultural observance during the month of February.

This year also marks the 100th anniversary of Route 66 forging a path across America. Here in Springfield, we’re the birthplace of Route 66, where the name was formalized all those years ago.

Both these milestone events converge right here on the Missouri State University campus at Kentwood Hall. Today, it’s a residence hall, but back then it was the Kentwood Arms Hotel, a very popular resting spot for Route 66 travelers. And by 1960, it was the site of a little-known piece of American history involving Vice President Richard Nixon and two African American members of his press corps.

“The process or the experience of the Kentwood Arms Hotel mirrors the broader civil rights movement and helping people to realize that sometimes there was two steps forward and a step backward and perhaps even a step to the side,” said Dr. Lyle Foster, an associate professor of sociology at Missouri State, and a local heritage organizer.

Today, local residents are remembering that historical moment through a new marker on the Springfield-Greene County African American Heritage Trail.

The Kentwood marker is already installed, but the group will officially unveil it later this month.

  1. Local residents are remembering that historical moment through a new marker on the Springfield-Greene County African American Heritage Trail.


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Filed Under: Faculty and Staff Page, Featured, University Life Tagged With: faculty, Lyle Foster, Reynolds College of Arts Social Sciences and Humanities, Sociology

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