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San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad Co. auctions off
parcels of land and creates a town site, calling it Las Vegas. |
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The Golden Gate Hotel & Casino opens in downtown Las Vegas.
It remains open today. |
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The city of Las Vegas is incorporated. |
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The first commercial airline flight, Western Airlines, took to
the skies. |
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Boulder Dam construction begins amid the Great Depression,
helping to increase the population of Las Vegas. |
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The Nevada Legislature legalizes gambling and quickie
divorces. |
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California Attorney General Earl Warren enforces state laws
against gambling, causing many operators to leave California to open
casinos in Las Vegas. |
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The U.S. Army Corps establishes a gunnery school near Las Vegas,
later to be called Nellis Air Force Base. |
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El Rancho Vegas opens; Strip begins the transformation from
hosting small gambling clubs to boasting casinos within luxury
resort hotels. Last Frontier is built soon after, and it remains
open today as the New Frontier. |
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Advertising expert J. Walter Thompson receives the first
advertising contract to promote Las Vegas as a tourist
destination. |
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The Golden Nugget opens downtown. On the Strip, Bugsy Siegel
opens the Flamingo Hotel; the state of Nevada levies its first
gaming taxes. |
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McCarran Field, now called McCarran International Airport,
opens. |
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The tallest building on the Strip, Wilbur Clark's Desert Inn,
opens with a three-story sky room. The Sahara, Sands, Riviera,
Stardust, Dunes and Tropicana open during the '50s, each boasting
dazzling entertainment. |
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The Moulin Rouge opens on Bonanza Road to accommodate black
entertainers who were refused service in other Las Vegas
establishments. |
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The Las Vegas Convention Center opens; the Legislature creates
the Nevada Gaming Commission to control gaming licenses. |
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Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Peter Lawford, Sammy Davis Jr. and
Joey Bishop, otherwise known as the Rat Pack, entertain audiences at
the Sands for the first time. |
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Billionaire, aviator and movie producer Howard Hughes arrives in
Las Vegas and moves into the Desert Inn. |
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Caesars Palace opens, drawing high rollers to its classic Roman
opulence. |
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Elvis and Priscilla Presley are married at the original Aladdin
Hotel, which is later imploded. |
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Evel Knievel becomes a household name when he jumps over the
fountains at Caesars Palace. He clears the fountains but crashes
after that. |
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A hotel fire at the MGM Grand, now Bally's, kills 85 people. The
fire spurs a change in U.S. safety laws and building codes. |
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The first National Finals Rodeo is held in Las Vegas. |
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The Mirage opens with more than 3,000 rooms and starts a
building renaissance in Las Vegas in the '90s. |
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The Excalibur Hotel, a family-friendly resort, opens on the
Strip. |
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The first Las Vegas Bowl is held at Sam Boyd Silver Bowl. |
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The Dunes Hotel is sold to casino/hotel entrepreneur Steve Wynn
and imploded to make way for the Bellagio. The MGM Grand (at the
time the world's largest resort hotel), is completed, costing $1
billion. |
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The world's first Hard Rock Hotel opens March 10, luring a new
generation of hipsters to Sin City. |
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Landmark Hotel is imploded Nov. 7. Footage of the implosion is
featured in Tim Burton's film "Mars Attacks!" |
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Wayne Newton celebrates his 25,000th Las Vegas performance. The
Stratosphere Tower, the tallest freestanding observation tower in
the United States, opens April 30. |
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The $72 million, 1,100-acre Las Vegas Motor Speedway opens in
September. |
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Owner Sheldon Adelson closes the Sands Hotel after 44 years of
operation. Adelson announces plans to build a 6,000-room megaresort
(now The Venetian) on the site. The Sands tower is imploded Nov.
26. |
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"Star Trek: The Experience" opens Jan. 4 at the Las Vegas
Hilton. |
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The original Aladdin Hotel is imploded April 27 to be replaced
by a new Aladdin Hotel. |
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Bellagio, billed as the world's most expensive hotel at $1.7
billion, opens Oct. 15 on the Strip; Las Vegas' first art gallery
featuring multimillion dollar works by master painters such as
Claude Monet opens at the resort. |
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Las Vegas establishments book Barbra Streisand, Bette Midler,
Rod Stewart, Elton John, Tina Turner, Wayne Newton and Don Rickles,
among others, to ring in the new century. |
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The Desert Inn closes and is bought by Steve Wynn, who implodes
the Augusta Tower to make way for a new 2,455-room, 42-story hotel
called Wynn Las Vegas, opening spring 2005. |
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The Palms Casino Resort opens Nov. 15, updating the classic
sophistication of Vegas with chic nightlife, dining and
accommodations. It becomes home to the CineVegas film festival, the
first casino tattoo shop and TV's "Celebrity Poker Showdown" and
"Real World: Las Vegas". |
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Las Vegas celebrates its 100th
birthday. |