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S&H printed 300 million stamps per week with many distributed on Route 66. We did some research or AI did and came up with the following! Stamps flourished alongside Route 66's golden age (1930s–1960s), when the highway supported hundreds of gas stations and motels. Preservation efforts highlight surviving S&H signage as cultural artifacts of this period.

Route 66, designated in 1926 and spanning 2,440 miles from Chicago to Los Angeles, was a quintessential American road lined with gas stations, motels, and diners, prime participants in the S&H program during its heyday. While no comprehensive archival list exists of every participating business, historical photos, personal accounts, and preservation records provide clear evidence of S&H stamps being given out at Route 66 stops. Below, summarizes some key references, focusing on gas stations and roadside businesses, with direct quotes and context.   

Here are some references

Erick, Oklahoma (Mile 100 on original alignment, near I-40 Exit 7)
Meat Market/Relic Site (with gas station ties)
A vintage S&H Green Stamps sign is displayed on the facade of the "City Meat Market" building along Old Route 66. The site evokes 1950s nostalgia, with locals recalling stamps from nearby gas stations: "I grew up in Oklahoma and remember my mom... collecting those stamps... Gas stations in our town gave them too."

Amboy, California (Mile 2,200+, Mojave Desert stretch)
Gas Station/Motel (Roy's Motel & Café)
Opened in 1938 as a gas and service station on Route 66, it catered to travelers with fuel, food, and lodging. Historical accounts confirm S&H participation at such desert stops, with preserved signage from the era. The site reopened in 2008 with original pumps, symbolizing Route 66's stamp-collecting culture.

General Route 66 Gas Stations (Multi-State)
Various (e.g., Phillips 66, Texaco in Shamrock TX, Vega TX, etc.)
Dozens of preserved stations (e.g., Belvedere Café & Gas in Litchfield IL; Martin's Phillips 66 in Amarillo TX) distributed S&H stamps, as recalled in oral histories: "Shoppers collected stamps from primarily grocery stores and gas stations." Surviving "We Give S&H Green Stamps" signs appear in Route 66 museums and photos.

Route 66 Museums & Preservation Sites
Exhibit/Collector Signs
A 1950s "We Give S&H Green Stamps" metal sign is displayed at the Frontier Auto Museum (near Route 66 in New Mexico), alongside oil cans and pumps from the era. Collector sites list Route 66-specific S&H artifacts, tying them to highway history.

Gay Parita Sinclair Filling Station in Missouri
It is located between Halltown and Spencer, Missouri, about 25 miles west of Springfield, and 3 miles west of Halltown. Route 66 roadtrippers always make a stop at this station, at 21118 Old Highway 66, Ash Grove, Missouri 

S&H Green Stamps were printed in Oklahoma, specifically at a major facility in Sand Springs, a suburb just west of Tulsa in Tulsa County centered around 36.139° N, 96.127° W, it's about 10-15 miles directly west of downtown Tulsa. This plant was operated by the Sperry & Hutchinson Company (S&H) and played a key role in producing the billions of stamps distributed nationwide during the program's peak from the 1930s to the 1980s.

 

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