2 billion years
ago
Present-day Nevada
is under water.
10 million years
ago
Nevada's mountain
ranges take their present-day
shapes.
1.5
million-10,000 years ago
Much of Nevada is
covered with ice.
12,000 years ago
The earliest
evidence of man in Nevada.
4,500 years ago
Indians known as
Archaic or Desert People inhabit
Nevada. They are the ancestors of
the Paiute people.
300 BC
Native Indians
called the "basketmakers" inhabit
the area. They use a spear-throwing
stick, called "atlatl," to hunt
big-horn sheep.
500 AD
The Anasazi,
Navajo for "enemy ancestors,"
inhabit the area.
1150
Pueblo Grande,
near today's Overton, 70 miles NE of
Las Vegas, becomes the first ghost
town in Nevada. It is unknown why
this center of the Anasazi
civilization is suddenly deserted.
1000-1700
The nomadic
Paiutes roam the future Las Vegas
area.
1803
Thomas Jefferson
negotiates the Louisiana purchase, a
$15 million deal (less than 3 cents
per acre), almost doubling the size
of the US.
1826
Jedediah Smith, an
American explorer, crosses the
southern tip of present-day Nevada
and makes contact with the Paiutes.
He is credited as the first American
to enter Nevada. (The first
Caucasian credited to first enter
Nevada is British fur trader Peter
Ogden.)
1829
Mexican trader
Antonio Armijo, leading a 60-man
party along the Spanish Trail route,
camps about 100 miles NE of
present-day Las Vegas. Rafael
Rivera, a scout, leaves the party
and discovers an area with abundant
vegetation and several natural
springs. He is considered the first
non-Indian to set foot in the Las
Vegas area. Las Vegas is Spanish for
"the meadows" or "fertile plains."
1843
Surveyor and
cartographer John C. Fremont,
sponsored by the US government, and
scout Kit Carson map the area.
1844
John C. Fremont
camps at Las Vegas and describes the
area in a report. "We encamped at a
camping ground called las Vegas.
The taste of the water is good, but
rather too warm to be agreeable; the
temperature being 71 in the one, and
73 in the other [spring]. They,
however, afforded a delightful
bathing place."
1845
20,000 copies of
Fremont's report and a map are
printed and become a guide for
future travelers through Nevada.
1846-47
The US and Mexico
are at war.
1848
The Treaty of
Guadalupe Hidalgo is signed, and
Mexico cedes to the US ownership of
land, a part of which will later
become Nevada. Mass migration to
California starts following the news
that gold was discovered at Sutter's
Fort.
1849
Dayton is the
first settlement in Nevada.
1850
The Las Vegas
area, because of its springs, is
already a popular rest stop for
California-bound emigrants.
1852
Mormon missionary
Hosen Stout stops at the Las Vegas
springs and writes about a "spring
of pure water about blood heat."
1854
Congress
establishes a mail route from Salt
Lake City to San Diego through Las
Vegas.
1855
The first
settlement in Las Vegas is
established by 30 Mormons led by
William Bringhurst. One of their
goals is "to build a fort there to
protect immigrants and the United
States mail from the Indians and to
teach the latter how to raise corn,
wheat, potatoes, squash and melons."
They build a fort, now a museum and
a state historic park, at the
intersection of Las Vegas Blvd and
Washington St.
1858
The Mormons
abandon their fort and return to
Salt Lake City.
1859
The number of
non-Native Americans inhabiting the
future Nevada is estimated at less
than 300. The Comstock Lode, a rich
silver deposit, is discovered on Mt
Davidson.
1860
6,857 people live
in the territory to become Nevada,
most of them miners.
1861
The Territory of
Nevada is created. James Nye of New
York is territorial governor. Carson
City is chosen as capital.
1864
Nevada becomes the
36th state. Three names were
considered for the new state:
Humboldt, Esmeralda, and Nevada
("snow-clad" or "snowy" in Spanish).
Las Vegas is still part of the state
of Arizona.
1865
Octavius Decatur
Gass, a former miner and irrigation
inspector, builds a ranch on the
site of the Mormon fort, which
becomes known as the Las Vegas
Ranch. He is the first permanent
settler in Las Vegas.
1867
Las Vegas becomes
part of the state of Nevada.
1870
Nevada's
population reaches 42,491.
1881
Gass defaults on a
loan and loses his ranch. Archibald
Stewart and his wife, Helen, become
the new owners. The population of
Nevada reaches 60,000.
1884
Archibald Stewart
is killed in a fight and his wife
Helen continues to operate the
prosperous ranch and store.
1895
Charles Fey, an
auto mechanic in San Francisco,
invents the first mechanical slot
machine.
1900
The population of
Nevada is 42,000 (from 60,000 ten
years earlier). The population of
Las Vegas is 19 (nineteen). Nevada's
largest town is Delamar, a gold
mining camp of 1,000 people about
100 miles north of Las Vegas.
1902
Helen Stewart
hires J. T. McWilliams to survey her
property planning to sell it to the
San Pedro, Los Angeles & Salt Lake
Railroad company, owned by Montana
Senator William Clark. McWilliams
discovers and claims 80 untitled
acres west of Stewart's ranch which
he later sells to newcomers.
1904
The railroad
tracks between Salt Lake City and
Los Angeles reach Las Vegas.
1905
The town of Las
Vegas is founded on May 15. The
railroad auctions 1,200 lots in a
single day in the present-day
downtown (Fremont St) area. Two
blocks, 16 and 17, are designated
for alcohol consumption. Block 16
(between First, Second, Ogden, and
Stewart streets, currently occupied
by the Horseshoe casino parking lot)
becomes a sex market, at a time when
red-light districts were common all
over the country. Hotel Las Vegas, a
30-room canvas-topped structure, is
the first major hotel in the new
town.
1906
The first hotel in
Las Vegas, Hotel Nevada, opens. In
1931 it is renamed Sal Sagev, which
is Las Vegas spelled backwards, and
later on Golden Gate.
1907
The first
telephones are installed. Wooden
pipes are used for telephone lines,
and one such pipe can be seen on
display at the Golden Gate hotel,
next to the first telephone
installed in Las Vegas. The
telephone number was "1").
1909
Las Vegas becomes
the county seat of Clark County
(named after railroad magnate and
Montana Senator William Clark).
Houses, bungalow-style, are built
for the railroad workers. Several
still exist in the downtown area, on
Second St.
1910
The population of
Las Vegas reaches 940. A new law
prohibits all forms of gambling.
1911
The City of Las
Vegas is incorporated. Its
population grows to 1,500.
1920
Las Vegas'
population is 2,304.
1925
Fremont St becomes
the first paved street in Las Vegas.
1928
President Calvin
Coolige signs the Boulder Canyon
Project Act, which would build
Hoover Dam. Las Vegas, for several
years in an economic slump,
celebrates "just like they was
nuts."
1929
There are 730
phones in Las Vegas. Thomas Young
starts the Young Electric Sign Co.
and the first neon sign appears in
the window of the Oasis Club on
Fremont St. In 1910, French inventor
George Claude attached an electrode
to a glass tube containing neon gas,
and a new form of illumination was
invented. In 1923, an American car
dealer from Los Angeles ordered a
neon sign from a Parisian sign
maker. The sign spelled Packard and
was installed on Wilshire Blvd,
causing a sensation. Las Vegas would
later on be known as Neon City.
1930
Las Vegas is the
fourth largest town in Nevada, after
Reno, Elko, and Ely. Its population
is 5,165.
1931
Hoover Dam
construction begins in Black Canyon,
30 miles southeast of Las Vegas. The
Nevada Legislature makes gambling
legal, approving a bill authored by
Phil Tobin, a Nevada rancher, who
never visited Las Vegas and had no
interest in gambling. The bill is
designed to to raise taxes for
public schools. The divorce law
changes to require only six weeks'
residence for filing.
1932
The Apache, now
Horseshoe, opens. With three
stories, it is the first hotel in
Las Vegas to have an elevator.
1935
Hoover Dam is
completed and dedicated by President
Franklin Roosevelt. Its cost is $175
million. Ninety-six people died
during its construction. At 720 ft
height, it has 3 million cubic yards
of concrete and is a considered one
of the seven engineering wonders of
the world.
Helldorado, a
celebration and parade in the Old
West tradition, lasting several
days, debuts and, after a brief
interruption, continues to be held
every year in May. The movie
Heldorado (one l
only), starring Roy Rogers, is
filmed in 1946.
1940
Las Vegas'
population reaches 8,422.
1941
El Rancho Vegas
opens about two miles south of Las
Vegas, on Highway 91 or the Los
Angeles Highway. It is the first
hotel/casino on the future Strip, on
33 acres for which Thomas Hull paid
$150 an acre.
The Strip
got its name from Guy McAfee, a
former Los Angeles vice cop who
opened Pioneer Club on Fremont St
and Club 91 on the Los Angeles
Highway. He began referring to this
stretch of Highway 91 as the
Strip, because it reminded him
of the Los Angeles Sunset strip
between Hollywood and Beverly Hills.
El Cortez Hotel
opens in downtown Las Vegas. The Las
Vegas Army Air Corps Gunnery School,
now called Nellis Airforce Base, is
established and contributes much to
the growth of the city. The Basic
Magnesium plant is built southwest
of Las Vegas, in the present-day
City of Henderson.
1942
The Last Frontier
hotel opens, the second hotel and
casino on the future Strip.
1946
Benjamin "Bugsy"
Siegel opens Flamingo on December
26, the third casino on the Strip.
Originally started by Billy
Wilkerson, who ran out of money,
Flamingo was designed as an elegant
hotel and casino (a "carpet joint"),
in contrast with the "sawdust
joints" on Fremont St. Downtown,
Golden Nugget and Eldorado (later
renamed Horseshoe) open.
1947
Bugsy Siegel is
shot in his girlfriend's (Virginia
Hill) mansion in Beverly Hills. The
Hoover Dam name, originally Boulder
Dam, is restored.
1948
Thunderbird, the
fourth casino on the Strip, opens.
It is imploded in 2000, after
changing names to Silverbird and El
Rancho, and closing in 1992, to make
room for the Turnberry Place
highrise condominiums. The McCarran
Field opens at the southend of the
Strip with 12 flights a day.
1950
The population of
Las Vegas is 24,624. Wilbur Clark
opens the Desert Inn. Silver Slipper
opens.
1951
Atom bomb testing
begins at the Nevada Test Site,
sixty miles north of Las Vegas. More
than 900 nuclear tests are conducted
until 1992. Benny Binion refurbishes
Eldorado and opens it as Horseshoe,
the first downtown casino with
carpeting on its floors.
1952
Sahara and Sands
(on the site of future Venetian)
open.
1955
The Riviera opens;
with nine stories, it is the tallest
hotel on the Strip. Moulin Rouge, a
hotel-casino for the segregated
black population, opens and closes
after 5 months. In 1992 the Moulin
Rouge is declared a national
historic site. Royal Nevada and
Dunes open. The population of Las
Vegas reaches 45,000.
1956
Hacienda opens, on
the site of Mandalay Bay. Fremont
opens downtown. Elvis Presley
performs at the New Frontier for an
audience who did not care for him or
his music. He returns in 1969 and
performs 826 times at the
International (now Hilton) for the
next eight years.
1957
The University of
Nevada, Las Vegas, is established.
The first topless show in Nevada,
Minsky's Follies, debuts at the
Dunes. Tropicana opens.
1958
Stardust opens.
1959
Las Vegas
Convention Center opens.
1960
Clark County
population reaches 127,016. Las
Vegas' population reaches 64,405. El
Rancho Vegas, the first casino on
the Strip, is destroyed by fire and
remains a vacant lot to this day
(across from Sahara, on Las Vegas
Blvd).
1964
The Beatles make
their only Las Vegas appearance
("because they wanted to see Las
Vegas"), performing in two sold-out
shows at the Las Vegas Convention
Center. They stayed at Sahara.
1966
Howard Hughes
checks into Desert Inn on
Thanksgiving Eve, planning to stay
for ten days. Caesars Palace opens
at a cost of $25 million. The
apostrophe is omitted deliberately.
"We wanted to create the feeling
that everybody in the hotel was a
Caesar," said J. Sarno, the creator
of Caesars Palace and Circus Circus.
Aladdin opens.
1967
Howard Hughes is
still occupying the penthouse floor
at the Desert Inn, and the hotel
management decides to get rid of
him, so they could rent the rooms to
gamblers. Hughes, who "needed a
place to sleep," buys the hotel from
Moe Dalitz for $13.2 million in
cash, paving the way to casino
ownership by publicly traded
corporations. He begins a shopping
spree of $300 million which includes
Castaways, Frontier, Landmark,
Sands, and Silver Slipper in Las
Vegas and Harold's Club in Reno.
Hughes had sold his interest in his
airline for $546,549,171, which was
paid to him in cash (in one check).
Hughes bought Silver Slipper because
the light of its sign bothered him.
"I want you to buy that place. That
damned sign is driving me crazy. It
goes round and round and round."
1968
Circus Circus
opens.
1969
International
(renamed Las Vegas Hilton in 1971)
opens. Elvis Presley starts
performing at the International. He
performs in 837 sold-out shows until
1977.
1970
Las Vegas'
population reaches 125,787.
1971
Siegfried
Fishbacher and Roy Horn come to Las
Vegas from the Lido du Paris.
1973
The original MGM
Grand, now Bally's, opens as the
largest hotel in the world with
2,100 rooms.
1974
Holiday Inn, later
renamed Harrah's, opens.
1977
Nevada gaming
revenues reach $1 billion. The
Nevada Legislature passes a foreign
gaming law allowing Nevada-based
casino owners to operate casinos
outside Nevada's borders.
1979
Imperial Palace,
Barbary Coast, Vegas World (on the
site of Stratosphere) and Sam's Town
(on Boulder Hwy) open.
1980
Las Vegas'
population is 164,674. Fitzgerald's
opens downtown; with 34 stories, it
is the tallest building in the state
of Nevada.
1983
Nevada legalizes
sports betting.
1985
The first National
Finals Rodeo is held in Las Vegas.
1989
Mirage opens with
3,039 rooms, at a cost of $630
million.
1990
Excalibur opens
with 4,032 rooms, the largest hotel
at the time. The population of
Nevada is 1,201,833, of Clark County
834,907, and of Las Vegas 232,370.
1993
Luxor ($375
million), Treasure Island ($430
million), and MGM Grand ($1 billion)
open. MGM Grand, with 5005 rooms, is
currently the largest hotel in the
world. The Dunes hotel is imploded
and the construction of Bellagio
begins.
1994
Boulder Station
Casino opens on Boulder Hwy.
1995
The $70 million
Fremont Street Experience opens.
1996
Stratosphere
opens. Stratosphere is the tallest
free-standing observation tower in
the US and the tallest building west
of Mississippi. Monte Carlo, modeled
after Place du Casino in Monaco and
offering "popular elegance," opens.
The $13 million Las Vegas Strip
beautification project, in which
76,000 palms, shrubs, flowering
foliage and ground covers were
planted, is finished.
1997
New York New York
Hotel Casino opens. Its exterior is
a reproduction of the New York City
skyline with one-third replicas of
12 New York towers. Las Vegas sets
an international record of 101,106
hotel/motel rooms in a single city.
1998
Bellagio ($1.7
billion), opens.
1999
Paris Las Vegas,
the Venetian, and Mandalay Bay open.
Four Seasons opens with 400 rooms on
the 35th through 39th floors of
Mandalay Bay, as the only Strip
hotel without a casino and as a
hotel within a hotel.
2001
Las Vegas declares
December 12 Sinatra Day (fifty years
after his Las Vegas debut at the
Desert Inn).
2002
Caesars Palace
adds a $95 million, 4,100-seat
theater.
2003
A 25-year-old engineer from
California wins the largest
slot-machine jackpot in history
($39,713,982.25), playing Megabucks
at Excalibur.
2005
Las Vegas celebrates its
centennial, with many events planned
throughout 2005. MGM Mirage buys
Mandalay Bay Resort for $7.9 billion
and now owns 28 casinos and has
almost 75,000 rooms on the Strip
(Bellagio, MGM Grand, Mandalay Bay,
Mirage, Treasure Island, Monte
Carlo, New York-New York, Excalibur,
Luxor, Circus Circus). Wynn Las
Vegas opens on April 28, with 2716
rooms, at a cost of $2.7 billion.
Sands Corp. starts work on a new
resort, Palazzo, to open in 2007 at
a cost of $1.6 billion; it will be
located between The Venetian and
Wynn Las Vegas. Harrah's
Entertainment buys Caesars
Entertainment for $9.4 billion.
2006
Red Rock Resort opens at 215 and
Charleston Blvd, at a cost of $925
million.
2007
Stardust is imploded to be
replaced by Echelon, on 64 acres
($4.8 billion project); the hotel
will have 5,000 rooms. The New
Frontier is imploded to to replaced
by Park Plaza, on 34 acres; the
hotel will have 3,500 rooms. The 36
acres of the New Frontier were sold
for $1.2 billion.
2008
Palazzo, a $1.8 billion,
3,025-room resort next to the
Venetian, opens in January. Aliante
Station, in North Las Vegas, opens
in November ($662 million). Encore,
Wynn Las Vegas' additional
$2.2-billion, 2,000-room
(all-suites), opens in December.
2009
M Resort, a $1 billion
casino-hotel development, opens in
March about 10 miles south of the
Strip on 90 acres.
(From
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