A Short History of Las Vegas
By Barbara Land, Myrick Land and Guy Louis Rocha
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A Short History of Las Vegas - Barbara Land
BOOKS BY MYRICK AND BARBARA LAND
A Short History of Las Vegas
A Short History of Reno
A Sierra Mosaic
Lee: A Portrait of Lee Harvey Oswald by His Brother, Robert Oswald, with Myrick and Barbara Land
The Changing South
Jungle Oil
The Quest of Isaac Newton
BY MYRICK LAND
The Fine Art of Literary Mayhem
Writing for Magazines
The Dream Buyers
Last Flight
Quicksand
Search the Dark Woods
BY BARBARA LAND
Las Vegas With Kids
The New Explorers
Evolution of a Scientist
The Telescope Makers
The Quest of Johannes Kepler
A SHORT HISTORY OF LAS VEGAS
Second Edition
Barbara Land and Myrick Land
FOREWORD BY GUY LOUIS ROCHA
University of Nevada Press
Reno Las Vegas
University of Nevada Press, Reno, Nevada 89557 USA
Copyright © 1999, 2004 by University of Nevada Press
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
Design by Erin Kirk New
The Library of Congress has cataloged the first edition as follows: Land, Barbara.
A short history of Las Vegas / Barbara Land and Myrick Land ; foreword by Guy Louis Rocha.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-87417-564-6 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. Las Vegas (Nev.)-History. I. Land, Myrick, 1922–1998. II. Title.
F849.L35L35 1999
979.3′135—dc21 98-41746
CIP
Title page photo: Fremont and Main, viewed from the railroad depot, Las Vegas, circa 1931. Collection of Imre de Pozsgay, Reno Color Lab.
ISBN 978-0-87417-643-8 (ebook)
To the real Nevadans who introduced us to the real Las Vegas.
CONTENTS
Foreword by Guy Louis Rocha
Preface to the Second Edition: Las Vegas: Fast Forward
Acknowledgments
1. Great Expectations
2. The Settlers
3. Two Towns Called Las Vegas
4. Gateway to the Dam
5. Politics, Las Vegas Style
6. Inventing the Strip
7. Bugsy and The Boys
8. Dark Shadows Over the Playground
9. Mr. Hughes Arrives in Las Vegas
10. The Entertainers
11. Three Tycoons
12. The Grand Tour
13. Big Deals, New Directions
14. Who Lives in Las Vegas?
Selected Bibliography: More About Las Vegas . . .
Index
FOREWORD
This book is about my hometown. The town I grew up in, the town that grew up around me, the town that grew into a community that I barely recognize today; the town in Southern Nevada like every town and like no other town in the world: Las Vegas!
I was absolutely delighted when Barbara Land approached me about writing the foreword to A Short History of Las Vegas. While I had helped Barbara and Mike
on this latest collaborative book project, directing them to resource material, reading chapters, and sharing the experience of being raised in the entertainment capital of the world, little did I know that my reward would be the chance to say something here about the city of my youth.
Maybe I first knew I came from someplace very different when I left Las Vegas for upstate New York and Syracuse University in 1969. Although I had visited Southern California as a child—I was born in Long Beach—it seemed to me then that there was something symbiotic between Las Vegas and Los Angeles–San Diego, and I certainly did not feel out of place there. In Syracuse, I encountered more humidity, snow, rain, and lush greenery than this denizen of the Mojave Desert had ever imagined. Much to my dismay, unlike my hometown, with its twenty-four-hour atmosphere, Syracuse—a city larger than Las Vegas at the time—virtually turned its lights off after midnight. I quickly found out what a novelty I was decked out in my white or green patent leather shoes, white belt, and warm-weather clothes. My fellow students from the northeast with their many accents (and I apparently without a dialect) did not know what to make of this street-wise kid from Vegas.
You live in Las Vegas? You’re kidding. People don’t live there. They go there. Where did you live? In a hotel?
I confronted questions practically every day that betrayed a perception of a city built on legalized vice and sin, absent families and children. The only image of my town was one long strip of casinos, hotels, and motels, and mobsters running amok.
What did you learn in school?
(Like maybe kids growing up in Las Vegas trained to be bartenders, dealers, and prostitutes.) I told them there were PTAS, churches and synagogues, and service organizations. I explained that outside the hotel-casino complexes there were quiet neighborhoods with shopping centers, bowling alleys, parks, and playgrounds. They found what I had to say very hard to believe. How could a city like Las Vegas have anything in common with their hometowns? Even the more cosmopolitan students from New York City who appeared to grasp what I was telling them found it a stretch of the imagination. Remember, Atlantic City and other communities throughout the country had not yet legalized gambling. Nobody could grow up in Las Vegas and be normal.
I thought I was reasonably normal. Yes, some of my classmates were the children of entertainers, Mob associates, and employees of Howard Hughes like Robert Maheu. Most of us did not have such credentials, however, and all of us were still normal
kids who went to the movies, proms, sporting events, and cruised Main Street—in this case Fremont Street between the Union Pacific Railroad Depot and the Blue Onion Drive-In.
When I told my dormitory buddies that I had worked as a union busboy and dishwasher at the Nevada Club and the El Cortez Hotel, they were all suitably impressed and wanted to know if I gambled, drank, and went to the risqué lounge shows. I found it ironic that New York State’s drinking age was eighteen at the time, and in Nevada we had to wait to twenty-one to legally consume alcohol.
Then there were all the questions about prostitution, especially the brothels. I did not understand the fascination with prostitution in Nevada. Even at my tender age I had heard of 42nd Street in New York City and Boston’s Combat Zone.
Many Americans still view Las Vegas as aberrant. That perception has been tempered in recent years as millions visit the family-oriented theme park hotel-casinos, and as legalized gambling has spread throughout the nation. Yet when you read accounts of Las Vegas (Tom Wolfe, Hunter Thompson, Noël Coward, etc.), you realize that those on the outside do not experience what it is like to live on the inside. Normal
people have been growing up and growing older in Las Vegas for generations, and Las Vegas has grown into one of the premier cities of the world.
In A Short History of Las Vegas, the Lands outline the Las Vegas story in its entirety, not just the glitz and glamour, the sensational and the sordid. This is a popular history that begins with the prehistoric era. We learn of the indigenous people before and after the coming of the European Americans. This lively and engaging work captures the trials and tribulations of a hardscrabble frontier inhabited by Mormons and other pioneers who many times clashed, sometimes cooperated with the native people (today members of the LDS Church and Native Americans are still very much a part of Las Vegas). The groundwork for the phenomenal transformation of southern Nevada in the twentieth century was laid with the completion of the last transcontinental railroad link in the nation and the founding of Las Vegas in 1905. However, some twenty-five years would pass before Americans recognized the difference between Las Vegas, New Mexico, and Las Vegas, Nevada.
Three events in 1931 forever changed the sleepy railroad town and Clark County seat of government: the construction of the massive Hoover (Boulder) Dam to tame the mighty Colorado River; the passage of a six-week divorce law; and the legalization of casino gambling. In a few short years Las Vegas had a fledgling resort industry, abundant electricity to power the growing town, and what seemed a limitless reservoir of water to quench the thirst of tourists and residents and transform the parched landscape into a neon oasis. The advent of the swamp cooler (I remember them well) and later refrigeration air conditioning revolutionized living in the desert. The Lands provide both colorful stories of a changing Las Vegas and an insight into what it took to build the infrastructure for a modern destination resort. Las Vegas, Nevada, was on the national map by the 1940s, and the Mob would help keep it there.
Some say mobster Benjamin Bugsy
Siegel was the father of modern Las Vegas. The Mafia had infiltrated Las Vegas by the beginning of World War II, and Siegel’s opening of the Flamingo Hotel on the embryonic Strip
in December 1946 ushered in a new era of casino resort entertainment. Floor and lounge shows with famous Hollywood and vaudeville stars abounded. Topless revues, like Minsky’s Follies, Folies Bergere, and the Lido de Paris became a mainstay at hotels beginning in the 1950s. Even Broadway productions graced the Strip showrooms (I remember seeing Flower Drum Song at the Thunderbird Hotel). Las Vegas soon went vertical, and new high-rise hotels gave the town an imposing skyline.
This era—so well portrayed by the Lands—beginning with Bugsy in the forties (who was gruesomely murdered in Los Angeles in 1947) and ending with Tony the Ant
Spilotro in the eighties (Tony and his brother took a dirt nap
in an Indiana cornfield outside Chicago in 1986) has shaped the public’s image of Las Vegas. The distorted Mob
image is what influenced the thinking of my fellow students at Syracuse University. Movies like the Godfather series, Goodfellas, and Casino have subsequently reinforced the negative stereotype of Las Vegas. The Mafia is no longer directly involved in running the casinos; corporate gaming has simply driven the Mob to the fringes of the gambling business.
Thanks to A Short History of Las Vegas, we know there is considerably more to the story. Like so many Nevadans of my generation, I was a product of the six-week divorce industry. My mother traveled to Las Vegas in 1955 with two toddlers in tow to untie the knot and stayed on. Those of us who were kids in the 1950s have fond memories of watching the atomic bomb explosions and the giant mushroom clouds rising into the desert sky. After the end of above-ground testing in the early sixties, we would suspend objects in our classrooms to see how far they would swing after a scheduled underground blast. And who could forget all the Las Vegas–Tonopah–Reno (LTR) buses loaded with thousands of workers every weekday snaking to and from the Mercury Test Site.
In the 1960s, Las Vegas and I both came of age. By the end of the decade, publicly traded gambling corporations had entered the scene. Howard Hughes and Kirk Kerkorian were the new gaming moguls shaping the face of the city. Las Vegas had eclipsed Reno as the nation’s foremost casino, wedding, and divorce capital. Nevada Southern University, only fourteen years old, had been renamed University of Nevada, Las Vegas. And I had graduated from Clark High School, to return from Syracuse only for vacation breaks.
Las Vegas was my hometown, but it was no longer my home. While I was pursuing graduate studies in San Diego and Reno, Las Vegas was undergoing a tremendous metamorphosis. As late as the early 1980s it was still considered an adult playground, and Circus Circus, with all its carnival games and circus acts (which I enjoyed as a teenager), was an exception to the rule.
Today, thanks to Steve Wynn and others of the new breed of casino entrepreneur, the rule is colossal theme resorts loaded with family amusements. Where there was just one Strip on the old Los Angeles highway, now there is a Boulder Highway Strip and another emerging on the road to Tonopah. Downtown Las Vegas has been transformed into the canopy-covered, computerized light show called the Fremont Street Experience. Outlying Clark County areas like Mesquite, Laughlin, and State Line (now Primm) that were mere watering holes twenty-five years ago are megaresorts today.
Metro Las Vegas is big and getting bigger. At the current growth rate, two million people will inhabit the valley and environs early in the next century. Only the scarcity of water, and the expansion of other casino venues here and abroad, might slow this Juggernaut. I can never go home again, for, as Alan Richman says in Lost Vegas
(Gentleman’s Quarterly, November 1992), my hometown has changed like no other in the last twenty-five years.
The Las Vegas I knew lives only in my memory and in works such as A Short History of Las Vegas. Barbara and Mike Land, who collaborated in their writing for more than forty years, have produced a fitting tribute to my hometown. I pay tribute to the Lands, who have touched many lives, and now mine, during their distinguished careers as journalists and writers. Sadly, Mike died in 1998, and I witnessed the tremendous outpouring of love and heartfelt remembrance of this remarkable scholar and teacher at a ceremony held at the University of Nevada, Reno, Reynolds School of Journalism. I take great pride in having worked with Barbara and Mike on this handsome volume and excellent introduction to the entertainment capital of the world.
I only wish I had had a book like this to show my college classmates so many years ago.
Guy Louis Rocha, State Archivist
Nevada State Library and Archives
January 1999
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION
LAS VEGAS: FAST FORWARD
How did a dusty little railroad town in the Nevada desert grow, in less than a century, to become a rich, sprawling metropolis? Why do so many people want to live there?
Before Mike and I started work on this book, we looked for answers to these questions, reading everything we could find about the city’s history. Then we talked to people who knew Las Vegas—people who had lived, attended school, and worked there. Some were born there. As visitors, we explored the city and its surroundings, discovering surprises everywhere we looked.
Who would have expected to find skiers on snowy slopes so close to a place where sunbathers were baking beside casino swimming pools? Who knew there was so much natural beauty just a few minutes away from the gambling palaces?
We followed geologists into Red Rock Canyon for close-up views of the striped rock formations we could see from the windows of our hotel room. We found ancient petroglyphs in the Valley of Fire and visited archaeological sites where prehistoric people once lived underground in pit houses—long before others built complex pueblos some ten thousand years ago.
At the Nevada Historical Society we found early twentieth-century photographs of freshwater springs in a desert oasis named by Spanish explorers in the late 1820s. They called it Las Vegas—the meadows
—unaware that this tiny oasis would become the birthplace of a thriving city. We found descriptions of the oasis in the journals of American explorer John C. Frémont and we visited the old Mormon Fort where early missionaries had tried and failed to build a permanent settlement.
We looked for remnants of Los Vegas Rancho,
established by Gold Rush prospector Octavius Decatur Gass after the Mormons left, and found stories about Archibald and Helen Stewart who took over the rancho
in 1881 and made it famous as Las Vegas Ranch. Some of their descendants still live in Las Vegas.
As journalists, our aim was to find lively, colorful stories to illustrate historical high points. Mike and I shared the research and each agreed to write specific chapters. Before Mike lost his battle with cancer in 1998, he had completed more than his share. Without him, I managed to finish the job and the University of Nevada Press produced the first edition of A Short History of Las Vegas in 1999. Since then, the whole Las Vegas Valley has evolved so fast that any published account of its recent history may be outdated before the ink dries. Barely three years after our book first appeared in bookstores, it became clear to the publisher that a new edition was perhaps overdue. So much had happened!
At the end of 1999, when the Las Vegas Valley was home to more than 1.5 million people, casinos on the Strip invited the world to come to a lavish New Year’s Eve party celebrating a new century and a new millennium. Revelers filled a hundred thousand hotel rooms and crowded into brand new megaresorts to usher in the year 2000. Around the world, television audiences watched showroom spectacles and fireworks broadcast from the one and only Las Vegas—a city on a roll.
This euphoria lasted into the following year, until September 11, 2001. Suddenly, a glittering playground seemed irrelevant in the shadow of a national tragedy. When Las Vegas joined the rest of the world in mourning the violent destruction of the World Trade Center in New York, the simultaneous attack on the Pentagon in Washington, and the crash of a hijacked plane in Pennsylvania, the mood of the city darkened. Residents and visitors heard rumors that Las Vegas could be a likely target for future terrorist attacks.
At McCarran International Airport, the number of overseas visitors dwindled to a trickle. Luxurious casino resorts were counting empty hotel rooms. Airlines began to cancel flights and airport security measures made flying a chore for anybody going anywhere. The new Las Vegas mayor, Oscar Goodman, faced serious challenges far beyond the city’s reputation as a tourist mecca. Now his first concern was the safety of its citizens.
After the tragedy, Goodman called for expansion of the Las Vegas Office of Emergency Management and a new plan for handling all-hazard
emergencies. Collaborating with other agencies in the Las Vegas Valley and with other American cities, the OEM set up a preparedness-training program and devised detailed plans for coping with disasters.
Within a year after the surprise attacks in the East, Las Vegas was regaining its good-time image. Some overseas flights resumed. During summer vacations from school, college students and families with children came to town, taking advantage of lower midweek rates at the big resort hotels. Casino billboards, still decorated with huge American flags, flashed patriotic slogans—UNITED WE STAND and GOD BLESS AMERICA! Las Vegas hadn’t forgotten September 11, but the eternal party went on.
September 11 could have been devastating to Las Vegas,
Goodman said later, but we proved to be very resilient and we’ve bounced back. I think there’s a real feeling of patriotism that wasn’t here before. We value our freedom more than ever.
During his first years in office, the mayor became more acutely aware of confusion in the minds of newcomers and visiting officials who didn’t quite know how to define Las Vegas. They seemed surprised to learn that the lavish resorts on the Strip were officially outside the city. The confusion was nothing new. For more than fifty years, since the 1940s, there had been attempts to consolidate the Strip with Las Vegas—along with unincorporated neighborhoods such as Paradise, Winchester, Sunrise Manor, and Spring Valley—but some casinos and other property owners had resisted the idea every time it came up for a vote.
As years went by, most people came to think of Las Vegas as the whole developed valley. There were no visible boundaries. Even the U.S. Census Bureau defined the Las Vegas–Paradise NV Metropolitan Statistical Area
as the whole Las Vegas Valley, including incorporated towns like Henderson, Boulder City, and North Las Vegas.
Mayor Goodman had his own ideas about unifying the area. We really should have a consolidated government in the Las Vegas Valley,
he said. I’ve thought about this and I’m going to be working on it. If I win a second term, it will be at the top of my list. The only reason it hasn’t happened is that politicians like to keep their little fiefdoms. But we’re all under a term limit of twelve years. So if we make our deadline to have consolidation twelve years from now, then none of the politicians now in office will be in office—so nobody should have any objection to it.
As Nevada’s attorney general for twelve years, Frankie Sue Del Papa didn’t object. I think it’s something that really needs to be explored,
she said in August 2002. As time goes on, more and more cities and counties and regions have to think in terms of economy. It just makes sense to pool certain resources. In some cases, it’s already being done. Las Vegas has a metropolitan police force—not just for the city. Eventually, I think the tax situation is such that the Las Vegas Valley will have to share other community services, too, because it’s just more economical and more efficient.
Del Papa, before she left office in January 2003, was keeping a vigilant eye on Las Vegas from her headquarters in Carson City and from two other offices in Reno and Las Vegas. I’m usually in the Vegas office two days out of every ten,
she said, "and I enjoy getting back to the place where I went to junior high school and high school. I’ve seen so many changes over the years, but now every time I go back