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Instructional Objectives

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The Meadows Supper Club. Opened in ... Bad Luck for the Meadows. 1932 hotel burned down. Firemen refused to fight fire ... gourmet food, big-name entertainment ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Instructional Objectives


1
Instructional Objectives
  • Be able to list the reasons Nevada Legislators
    saw fit to legalize gambling and why.
  • Explain the roles the Northern Club, the Meadows,
    the El Rancho Vegas, and the Flamingo played in
    the development of gambling.

2
Instructional Objectives (continued)
  • List the contributions made by Bugsy Siegel,
    Raymond Smith, Bill Harrah, Howard Hughes, Tony
    Cornero, and Steve Wynn made to the gaming
    industry.
  • Explain what was the Bull Pen Casino and what
    made it different.

3
Events that changed Course of Nevada History
  • Stock Market crash of 1929 and subsequent
    depression.
  • Funding of Hoover Dam within 3 months of crash.

4
Depressions Influence
  • 1931 was one of the worst depression years.
  • State needed money and stimulus for business.

5
A.B. 98, a.k.a. Wide Open Gambling Bill
  • Phil Tobin, 29 year old assemblyman from
    Winnemuca, introduces bill.

6
Legislators felt Gambling would
  • Provide state with revenues through gambling
    taxes.
  • Enhance business in general.
  • Most importantly with coming of Hoover Dam it
    was believed Federal Officials might move to
    close down Las Vegas illegal gambling.

7
A.B. 98 signed into Law March 19, 1931
  • Same legislature lowered the residency
    requirements for divorce from 3 months to 6
    weeks.
  • No method of regulation included in bill.
    Cheating and operating without license were
    forbidden but no state control provided.

8
Games Legalized
  • Faro
  • Monte
  • Roulette
  • Keno
  • Fan-tan
  • Twenty-one
  • Blackjack
  • Seven and a half
  • Big Injun
  • Craps
  • Klondyke
  • Stud Poker
  • Draw Poker
  • Slots

9
New Source of State Revenues
  • Card games charged 25 per month.
  • Slots charged 10 per month.
  • Table games charged 50 per month.
  • 75 to county, 25 to state.
  • Sheriff collected taxes.

10
Bull Pen Casino
  • 1932 gambling permitted at state prison.
  • Operated by inmates (game boss).
  • Offered poker, 21, craps, chuck-a-luck, roulette,
    and race sports.
  • Each game boss required to contribute to inmate
    welfare fund.
  • Closed in 1967.

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Northern Club
  • First gaming license issued in Nevada.

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The Meadows Supper Club
  • Opened in Las Vegas on May 2, 1931.
  • Built by Tony Cornero, cost 300,000.
  • Had 100 rooms and was grandest club in Nevada.
  • Adjacent airport and place to buy prohibited
    liquor.

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Bad Luck for the Meadows
  • 1932 hotel burned down.
  • Firemen refused to fight fire
  • Club went bankrupt in 1937.
  • Tony Cornero later operated California gambling
    ship SS Rex.

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Casino Marketing Begins
  • 1935 Raymond Pappy Smith and his son, Harold,
    open Harolds Club in Reno at a cost of 500.
  • First to
  • open casino to the street
  • introduce mouse roulette
  • hire women dealers

24
Smith First to conduct National Ad Campaign
  • At one point Harolds Club had over 2,300
    billboards placed on major U.S. highways.

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Bill Harrahs Bingo Club
  • Opened in 1937
  • Marketed to those outside the state of Nevada.
  • Introduced corporate management philosophies to
    gaming industry.

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Birth of the Strip
  • Thomas Hull opens El Rancho Vegas on Highway 91
    in 1941
  • El Cortez opens downtown in 1941.
  • In 1942 Last Frontier opens.

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Downtown Las Vegas
  • Circa 1948

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Bugsy Siegel
  • Born 1906 in Brooklyn, New York.
  • Began career in crime by extorting money from
    Jewish pushcart peddlers on New Yorks Lower East
    Side.
  • Teamed up with Meyer Lansky at the age of 12.

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Off to California
  • Syndicate leaders send Bugsy to California in
    1937.
  • In California, Bugsy successfully develops
  • gambling dens
  • gambling ships (offshore beyond 12 miles)
  • narcotics smuggling

45
While in California
  • Cultivated Hollywood ties through childhood
    friend George Raft.
  • Began a love relationship with starlet Virginia
    Hill (ex-girlfriend of Joe Adonis).
  • Developed nationwide bookmakers wire service.

46
Bugsy Comes to Vegas in 41
  • Legislators legalize race horse betting.
  • Bugsys Trans-America wire service provides race
    results.

47
Siegel, Lansky, et al, Owned Interest in
  • El Cortez, Last Frontier, and Golden Nugget prior
    to building of Flamingo.

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The Planning of the Flamingo
  • Bill Wilkerson, the founder of the Hollywood
    Reporter, had original idea for the Flamingo.
  • Wilkersons idea
  • gourmet food, big-name entertainment
  • movie stars and starlets in casino day and night
    (he had the contacts through Reporter)

50
Siegel, Lansky and Partners Buy In
  • Bought 67 of Wilkersons project for 650,000.
  • Flamingos initial projected cost 1 million.

51
Bugsy and the Flamingo
  • Total cost exceeds 6 million.
  • Cost overruns involved extensive skimming by
    Siegel.
  • Virginia Hill deposited funds in European banks.
  • Began writing bad checks to complete construction.

52
Flamingo Opens
  • Casino opened December 46 before hotel
    completed.
  • Tremendously successful opening with many stars
    present.
  • With no rooms to stay, guests either returned to
    L.A. or stayed downtown.

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Flamingo Losses
  • Casino immediately begins to lose money.
  • Casino losses forced closure Feb 1, 47 to await
    completion of hotel.

57
Flamingo Reopens
  • Casino hotel reopens March 1, 1947.
  • Cost overruns and perceived theft of construction
    funds results in Lucky Lucianos order to murder
    Bugsy.
  • Bugsy murdered June 20, 1947 at the home of his
    girlfriend, Virginia Hill. He was 41 years old.

58
Howard Hughes adds Legitimacy to Industry
  • Texas millionaire arrives in Vegas in 1966 and
    immediately begins to buy casinos.
  • Purchased 6 casinos on Strip and Harolds Club in
    Reno.
  • Justice Department and Commission concerned about
    his dominance.

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Chronology of Casino Openings 1940-1969
  • El Rancho Vegas 41
  • El Cortez 42
  • Last Frontier 42
  • Golden Nugget 46
  • Flamingo 47
  • Thunderbird 48
  • Desert Inn 50
  • Horseshoe 51
  • Sands 52
  • Showboat 54
  • New Frontier 54
  • Dunes Riviera 55

63
  • Hacienda 56
  • Tropicana 57
  • Stardust 58
  • Fremont 60
  • Mint 62
  • Castaways 63
  • Aladdin 66
  • Caesars Palace 66
  • Four Queens 66
  • Bonanza 67
  • International 69
  • Landmark 69

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