Black and white image of businessmen and engineers affiliated with Hoover Dam. From left to right: W. A. Bechtel, First Vice President, Six Companies, Inc.; Walker R. Young, Construction Engineer, Bureau of Reclamation; Elwood Mead, Commissioner, Bureau of Reclamation, F. T. Crowe, General Superintendent, Six Companies, Inc.; R. F. Walter, Chief Engineer, Bureau of Reclamation. Note: Boulder Dam was officially renamed Hoover Dam in 1947.
Letter from from Enid Ricardeau, Director of Ballet Symposium, Dance Masters of America, Inc., to Vassili Suclih, thanking Sulich for his participation in the DMA Ballet Symposium in New York City. Letter on Dance Masters of America, Inc. letterhead.
People at Mt. Charleston, outside the Lawson or Rockwell cabin. Individuals identified as Dick Cornish, Mrs. Lawson & Eugenia, Leon & Bessie Rockwell and Children, Allye Lawson.
Black and white image of Olive Lake and two others, presumed to be Herbert Squires and his father, Charles P. Squires, at the Squires' mine at Mount Charleston near Las Vegas. Transcribed notes from Special Collections photo inventory: “Charleston 1912. Olive, Herbert, & Dad at his mine, 2 miles on up the Canyon.”
The Clark County High School (now Las Vegas High School) Men's Basketball team, 1921-22. Pictured L-R: Julian Andersen, Lester Leavitt, Andrew Pulsipter, Don Sears, Leonard Noblitt, Glenn Goodwin, Floyd Knickerbocker.
Two Indian women, one holding a child. The man on the right is possibly O. .J. Fisk, according to note that is attached to the photograph. The photograph was taken in either Pahrump Valley or Ash Meadows, Nevada.
A view of the front of the Golden Nugget Gambling Hall. A banner advertising "Cooled by refrigeration always pleasant" is visible on the right-hand side of the building. The Golden Nugget opened in 1946, and is the first structure designed from the ground up to be a casino. Steve Wynn became the majority shareholder in 1973, and built the first tower in 1977. In 1984, the neon was removed from the building and the spa tower was built, along with the showroom. The third tower was opened in 1989. The hotel now has 2,419 rooms and suites. The casino's large hotel sign at its entrance off Fremont and Casino Center was removed in 1984 when the casino underwent renovations. The old sign presently sits at the YESCO (Young Electric Sign Company) sign yard.