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Letter from C. A. Earle Rinker to his mother, March 20, 1908

Date

1908-03-20

Archival Collection

Description

Letter from C. A. Earle Rinker to his mother, March 20, 1908

Text

Letter from N. A. Williams to E. E. Calvin, October 24, 1922

Date

1922-10-24

Archival Collection

Description

Letter addresses the purchase of two vehicles for use by railroad employees in Las Vegas to deal with radicals during the strike.

Text

Letter from C. A. Earle Rinker to his family, October 25, 1906

Date

1906-10-25

Archival Collection

Description

Letter home from Earle. He arrived in Goldfield. The letter touches upon his trip, his first impressions, he speaks of women, dust, elevation, his new job at MacMaster & MacMaster, costs of living, wages, and a fight in the city, there is a particularly interesting paragraph about Goldfield being lively and the amounts of money changing hands.

Text

Stardust Resort and Casino exterior, Las Vegas, Nevada: photographs

Date

1962 (year approximate) to 1967

Description

Photographs from the Stardust Hotel and Desert Inn Hotel Photographic Negatives -- Stardust Hotel and Desert Inn Hotel photographic negatives file.

Image

Photograph of the front exterior of the Hotel Nevada (Las Vegas), circa 1910

Date

1908 to 1912

Description

Hotel Nevada after the addition of a balcony. Transcribed from photo sleeve: "by Florence Lee Jones ... March, 1969. Early Las Vegas History. The Hotel Nevada, at the Southeast corner of Main and Fremont Streets, is the oldest continuous hotel business in Las Vegas, although it has been known as Sal Sagev (Las Vegas spelled backward) since 1928. The hostelry started as a tent in 1905, but the late John Miller soon erected a permanent building, shown above, which provided the most luxurious accommodations and the best food in Las Vegas for many years. In the 1930's the Sal Sagev Hotel had one of the three elevators in town. A private dining room was a popular place for private parties for the elite of the town. The hotel is now owned and operated by Miller's son, Abe Miller, and his daughter, Mrs. Sherman E. Nugent. The Golden Gate Club now occupies much of the first floor of the building. On the North side of the building is a sign "Bank of Southern Nevada", which was the second bank established in Las Vegas. (The other was the First State Bank.) Started by John F. Miller, Ed Von Tobel, Sr., Will Beckley, Attorney Frank Stevens, and Hal D. Buzick, the Bank of Southern Nevada was an important factor in Southern Nevada's economy. During the 1930's and the Depression, the federal government issued restrictive orders on bank operations. The reaction of the independent Las Vegans was 'No guy in Washington is going to tell us how to run our bank.' ... So they paid off all the depositors and closed the bank. The Rhoads & Rhoads General Machine Works (extreme right) was one of the first automobile agencies in town - the start of Community Chevrolet."
Site Name: Hotel Nevada
Address: 1 Fremont Street

Image

Vail Pittman, Nevada governor, image 034 of 046: photographic print

Date

1947 (year approximate)

Description

Vail Pittman in "Black Maria" truck (?) in Hawthorne, Nevada.

Image

Thorwald Adolf Arthur Siegfried: photographic print

Date

1930 (year approximate)

Description

From the Nan Doughty Photograph Collection (PH-00240)

Image

C Street looking south, Virginia City, Nevada: postcard

Date

1975 (year approximate)

Description

From the Nan Doughty Photograph Collection (PH-00240)

Image

Photograph of Railroad Pass, Nevada, circa 1932

Date

1932 (year approximate)

Description

View of the Las Vegas Valley from Railroad Pass.

Image

Photograph of three people standing with their cars, Las Vegas (Nev.)

Date

1943 (year approximate)

Description

Two unidentified women and a man (that could possibly be Binion's family members) stand in front of their cars on a ranch.

Image