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Letter from Harold J. Stocker (Clark County, Nevada) to Harold L. Ickes (Washington, D.C.) February 26, 1940

Date

1940-02-26

Description

Clark County commissioner asking the Secretary of the Interior to use some of the funds from the Arid Lands Fund to create a drinking water system in the Moapa Valley.

Text

Photograph of house, Caliente, Nevada, circa early 1900s

Date

1900 to 1910

Description

Frame house probably in Caliente, Nevada.

Image

Report, Civilian Conservation Corps work on the flood menace in Southern Nevada, after 1935

Date

1935 (year approximate) to open end

Description

Summary of the flood control work performed by the Civilian Conservation Corp in the Moapa Valley

Text

Letter from Mary Etta Syphus, Panaca, Nevada to John M. Bunker, Eldorado Canyon, Nevada

Date

1891-08-10

Archival Collection

Description

From the Syphus-Bunker Papers (MS-00169). The folder contains an original handwritten letter and a typed transcription of the same letter, and a copy of original letter attached.

Text

Photograph of Judy Bayley at a public event at the Hacienda Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas, Nevada, 1971

Date

1971

Description

Judy Bayley at a public event relating to the Trailrides at the Palomino Room at the Hacienda Hotel and Casino. The unidentified man standing behind Judy Bayley is wearing a badge that says "Judy Bayley's 4th Annual Las Vegas Hacienda Trail Ride Thru Paradise Valley 1971." "Participant" is stamped on the attached ribbon. Judith “Judy” Bayley, namesake of the Judy Bayley Theatre at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, was once known as “The First Lady of Gambling.” Judy and her husband Warren “Doc” Bayley opened the Hacienda Hotel and Casino on October 17, 1956. After Warren’s unexpected death from a heart attack on December, 26, 1964, Judy Bayley took over the ownership and operations of the Hacienda. By doing so, she became the first woman in Nevada history to be the sole owner and operator of a hotel-casino. An avid horsewoman, as a publicity campaign, Judy started “The Hacienda Trailrides.” Which some considered the social event of the year. The first trailride was held in December, 1968 to commemorate Pearl Harbor. The ride began at the Valley of Fire State Park and Ended in Overton, Nevada. Judy donated all proceeds from the trailride to benefit the local Veterans of Foreign Wars. Four Trailrides were held over the next four years, leaving from Tule Springs (now Floyd Lamb State Park), and from the Hacienda itself before they were discontinued after her death. After Judy’s death from cancer on December 31, 1971, the Hacienda was sold in 1972. The Hacienda’s doors closed to the public on December 10, 1996. The hotel was imploded on December 31, 1996 on the 25th anniversary of Judy Bayley’s death, and was broadcast on the Fox news network as part of their New Year’s Eve 1996 telecast. In March 1999, it was replaced with the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino.

Image

Meeting minutes for Consolidated Student Senate, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, October 22, 2007

Date

2007-10-22

Description

Includes meeting agenda. CSUN Session 37 Meeting Minutes and Agendas.

Text

Photograph of Joseph Foley, Las Vegas, Nevada, 1984

Date

1984

Description

University of Nevada Regent Joseph Foley.

Image

Photograph of Nevada Dance performance, circa 1970s-1980s

Date

1970 to 1989

Description

Dancers in a Nevada Dance Theatre production.

Image

Southern Nevada Photo Album, image 085

Description

85.1 Susan Ferry-S.P. Co. ; 85.2 Rube, Melba, and Snapper. ; 85.3 Unidentified girl on bicycle. ; 85.4 Carlin Pond, Carlin, Nevada. ; 85.5 Unidentified body of water. ; 85.6 Unidentified group of twelve people.

Construction of Nevada Club, image 001: photographic print

Date

1959

Description

View showing construction of the Nevada Club.

Image