Source:
Chicago Trib
'Last of the original hippies' was inspiration for 'Cars' characterOut there on Route 66, among the desert rats and yodelers, bluegrass musicians and storekeepers, artist Bob Waldmire found a home in a life that defied settling down.
For some 40 years, he lived the Mother Road's itinerant ideal, defined its congenial ethos and, say Route 66 aficionados still learning of his death, left a body of art as iconic as the route that inspired it.
Mr. Waldmire, 64, the restless illustrator who created a wealth of emblematic images of Route 66, surpassed only by the extensive network of friendships forged along its shoulders, diner counters and rest stops, ran out of road Wednesday, Dec. 16, in a bedroom of his brother's farmhouse in Rochester, Ill. The cause was abdominal cancer, his brother Bill said.
Mr. Waldmire's friend Michael Wallis, the Route 66 author, likened the illustrator to "the Johnny Appleseed of the Mother Road." Jim Conkle, who helped engineer the route's resurgence with counsel and encouragement from Mr. Waldmire, called him "a legend." Talking to a reporter for a Tribune story that ran a month before his death, Mr. Waldmire called himself a "lovable cuss."
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His memorial will be held from noon until 2 p.m. Sunday in the Wilson Park Funeral Home in Rochester. He will be cremated. Half the ashes will be buried beside his parents' in Rochester. In accordance with his written instructions, the other half will go to friends. He asked them to scatter them along Route 66.
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