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Photograph of a residence with a balcony, Pioche (Nev.), 1900-1925

Date

1900 to 1925

Description

Photograph of a residence with a balcony, Pioche (Nev.), 1900-1925

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Photograph of houses dug into the earth, Goldfield (Nev.), 1903

Date

1903

Archival Collection

Description

Caption: Goldfield's original dugout houses, 1903

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Photograph of a tent settlement, Jean, (Nev.), 1905

Date

1905

Archival Collection

Description

Photograph of a tent settlement, Jean, (Nev.), 1905

Image

Photograph of a home in Eldorado Canyon (Nev.), 1900-1925

Date

1900 to 1925

Description

Caption: Home (the mixer, that mixed the mud for the adobe bricks of the house.)

Image

Transcript of interview with Bill Snyder by Claytee White, November 21, 2008

Date

2008-11-21

Description

In 1978 Bill Snyder came Las Vegas for a heavyweight championship fight between his homeboy, Larry Holmes and Ken Norton. During that visit, he saw cranes dotting the cityscape so he returned home and proposed that the family move across country and settle in the desert. His wife, Joy, gave him a year. And as they say, the rest is history. And what am amazing history it is. In this interview, Bill Snyder talks about his life from its beginning in Easton, Pennsylvania, where he discovered the challenge of architecture first by perusing books in the library and then by hands-on construction experience. But his love of art built the foundation to this treasured craft that has allowed him to design homes, office buildings, airport terminals and the McCaw School of Mines on the campus of McCaw Elementary School in Henderson, NV. The projects that Mr. Snyder seems to prize most are those that include the imagination of children. The people who shaped his life are introduced and the impact of his military training is wonderfully expressed. His connection with young people is paramount throughout the oral history that is beautifully documented with images of many of the projects that displayed children's art in an exciting way. Bill and Joy are the parents of two sons. Dana age 36, lives with his wife Christine in Hollywood, California, and works as a voice actor best known for his role as Master Shake on the cartoon Aqua Teen Hunger Force. Their younger son, Mike age 31, owns The Krate, a clothing, music, and art shop in Santa Cruz, California, where he lives with his wife Mandy and daughter Maya. A husband, father, sports car enthusiast, runner, thinker and lover of teaching and trusting young people, Bill Snyder is a brilliant architect and manager of people. He is dyslectic and never expected a school to be named in his honor but the William E. Snyder Elementary School was dedicated in 2001 with overwhelming community support. One of his current goals is to dream an architectural project that rivals the McCaw School of Mines for his own school. I trust that you will learn to love architecture in a different and very profound way as you read this interview just as I did during my conversation with Bill.

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Postcard of a the Goldfield Hotel, Goldfield (Nev.), 1900-1920

Date

1900 to 1920

Description

Caption: Goldfield
Site Name: Goldfield Hotel (Goldfield, Nev.)

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Photograph of a house in Goldfield (Nev.), 1900-1920

Date

1900 to 1920

Description

Photograph of a house in Goldfield (Nev.), 1900-1920

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Photograph of Tom Kelly's Bottle House, Rhyolite (Nev.), 1920

Date

1920

Description

Site Name: The Bottle House (Rhyolite, Nev.)

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Photograph of a man standing in front of the Goldfield church, Goldfield (Nev.), 1905

Date

1905

Description

Inscription on fron reads: : A Quaker yes?" Inscription on reverse reads "Bert M. Weaver"
Caption: A Quaker, yes?

Image

Photograph of a house made from metal cans, Goldfield (Nev.), 1900-1920

Date

1900 to 1920

Description

Photograph of a house made from metal cans, Goldfield (Nev.), 1900-1920

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