Entries by LasVegasLynn (886)
We have migrated to a new site
Hello,
For the last couple of years, I have had a new Classic Las Vegas site but have maintained this one as well. As of today-January 20th, 2018, this site will remain but I won't be doing any active posting to it.
As the technology of blogging has improved, the new site offers better ways to post photo galleries and images as well as video clips.
All is not lost, just bookmark this site:
There you will find the same great subject matter, the history of Las Vegas from someone who grew up there and still loves the Las Vegas that was once there (and still is if you know where to look and I do!).
So I hope you will check it out!
Happy Thanksgiving from Classic Las Vegas
From our house to yours, hoping everyone has a wonderful holiday filled with family, friends and lots of memories!
Remember, if you are starting your holiday shopping this weekend, we recommend our two books on the history of the Classic Las Vegas Strip, including detailed histories from conception to implosion (with a few survival stories) built during those years for that Las Vegas lover in your life:
Gambling on a Dream: The Classic Las Vegas Strip 1930-1955
Gambling on a Dream: The Classic Las Vegas Strip 1956-1973
Happy Thanksgiving!!!!!!
Presentation at the State Museum, Friday, Nov. 10th
This Friday evening, Nov. 10th, at the Nevada State Museum, Las Vegas, I will be giving a presentation on my new book, Gambling on a Dream: The Classic Las Vegas Strip 1956-1973.
I'll be talking about hotels built in those years as well as the architecture, the neon, and the efforts to get the mob out of the hotels in the late 1970s. So if you love Classic Las Vegas and Las Vegas History, you should enjoy this presentation.
The reception begins at 6:30 pm with the talk at 7:00 pm.
Hope to see you there!
Go the Book Section of the website for information and links to buy the book.
Why I Love Classic Las Vegas
I truly love the Classic Las Vegas era. Perhaps it has something to do with growing up there during its heyday as the Entertainment Capital of the World. But some of my fondest memories are of the giant neon signs that used to dot the landscape.
From the fabulous Strip to the canyon on neon that was Fremont Street to the various neighborhoods, neon seemed to be everywhere. My family used to go to Lake Mead on weekends to swim and soak up the sun. Driving home, Boulder Highway was ablaze in neon signs. Turning onto Fremont Street, the neon continued as we passed the Sky Ranch motel and all the little motor courts and motels that used to be part of that landscape. The ribbon of neon led up to the canyon of neon that was Fremont Street before that damned canopy was put over the street and the signs and the sight lines were destroyed. Once you crossed Fifth Street back then, it was like being engulfed in neon and flasher bulbs. It was heaven.
The architecture didn't have that sameness to it that too much of it does these days. You'd have been hard pressed to find faux-Tuscan facades. Instead, on the Strip, especially, the properties were set back off the highway (not built out to the curb the way they are today) with elegant porte cocheres inviting you to come in out of the heat and enjoy yourself. Each hotel had it's own charm, separate and distinct from the others. Mid-Century Modern was everywhere-from the Sands to the Riviera to the Tropicana- and not just the architecture but the signage, too.
That aesthetic also was part of the neighborhood I grew up in, Charleston Heights. We had a Momma Mia's Italian restaurant in the shopping center at Decatur and Alta that had a large neon sign-as did the Sprouse Reitz, the Safeway and the W.T. Grant store. There was the Charleston Heights Bowling Alley not far away and a larger one at the corner of Charleston Blvd and Decatur.
It's all changed now as the town grew from the small town into a metropolis with different tastes and more faux-Tuscan architecture than should be allowed. The small family owned businesses that used to dot the landscape have been replaced by large chain drugstores and box stores.
The neon is almost gone as well as more and more of the remaining signs are replaced with LED and video signage. Luckily, more of them are finding a home at the Neon Museum.
I wish I had appreciated it more growing up-isn't that always the case. I wish I had taken a lot more pictures and explored the buildings more (especially the old El Rancho bungalows that were once still there long after the hotel had burned).
But, I do have my memories of it all and that's better than not having experienced at all.
Image courtesy of the Nevada State Museum, Las Vegas
Gambling on a Dream: The Classic Las Vegas Strip 1956-1973 now AVAILABLE!
Dear Classic Las Vegas fans! Volume 2 of my Las Vegas history book has just been released - and is available in all e-reader formats!
This multimedia-rich book is a follow up to my previously released Volume 1 book (1930-1955). It continues the historical journey by telling the fascinating story of the Las Vegas Strip hotels built during the turbulent years of cultural and societal change, 1956-1973.
Offering the perspective of those who were there, you will read detailed histories of those hotels from conception to implosion (with a few survival stories) and learn about the visionaries who built them, the entertainers who performed there and from the men and women who worked, entertained and played there.
loaded with multimedia content!
♠️ Nearly 30 VIDEOS
that can be played inside the book!
♣️ CUSTOM DESIGNED MAPS
showing each hotel's location on the Strip
♥️ TOUCHSCREEN PHOTO GALLERIES
of rarely seen historical images
Promotional Pricing- $9.99 available at Classiclasvegas.com